WHAT IS InfantSEE®?
InfantSEE® is a public health program designed to ensure that eye and vision care becomes an integral part of infant wellness care to improve a child’s quality of life. InfantSEE® was developed by the American Optometric Association and The Vision Care Institute of Johnson & Johnson Vision Care Inc. Participating optometrists provide a no-cost comprehensive infant eye and vision assessment within the first year of life. At Jensen Optometrists Drs. Clark, Collings, and Collings are all providers of InfantSEE® exams.
WHY SHOULD YOU HAVE YOUR BABY EXAMINED?
An InfantSEE® assessment between six and 12 months of age is recommended to determine if an infant is at risk for eye or vision disorders. Since many eye problems arise from conditions that can be identified by an eye doctor in the infant's first year of life, a parent can give an infant a great gift by seeking an InfantSEE® assessment in addition to the wellness evaluation of the eyes that is done by a pediatrician or family practice doctor.
One in every 10 children is at risk from undiagnosed eye and vision problems, yet only 13 percent of mothers with children younger than 2 years of age said they had taken their babies to see an eye and vision care professional for a regular check-up or well-care visit. Moreover, many children at risk for eye and vision problems are not being identified at an early age, when many of those problems might be prevented or more easily corrected. Some 4.02 million children were born in 2004, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. In approximately 4 percent, strabismus will develop, and amblyopia will develop in 3 percent-this equates to as many as 100,000 infants born each year who are at risk for serious eye and vision problems.
Early intervention is critical to successful and cost-effective treatment. Despite the nation's present system of preschool vision screening, there exists a lack of understanding by the public of the importance of periodic professional eye and vision assessments. Unfortunately, during the course of their young lives, most children probably never see an eye care practitioner who can provide the kind of professional eye assessment necessary to identify critical eye and vision problems at an early stage, explain those conditions to parents, and provide the care necessary to correct those problems.
To learn more about InfantSEE®, what to expect when you bring your baby to an exam, and to watch what an InfantSEE® assessment entails please visit www.infantsee.org
Information on this page was used courtesy of the InfantSEE® website.
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