The Post

More athletes should wear protective goggles

- Will Harvie will.harvie@stuff.co.nz

Hockey, badminton and football players should wear eye protection, according to a pair of new scientific studies. Eye injuries fell threefold when some women high school hockey players in America were compelled to wear goggles, said Dr James McKelvie, an eye surgeon and senior lecturer in the Department of Ophthalmol­ogy at University of Auckland.

‘‘The use of appropriat­e protective eyewear for other high-risk non-contact sports, such as squash, badminton and soccer, is likely to reduce the rate of ocular injury and warrants further investigat­ion,’’ McKelvie and colleagues wrote in an academic journal.

‘‘It’s a really simple thing for sporting organisati­ons to mandate the use of protective eyewear,’’ McKelvie said in an interview.

‘‘But it can have a profound effect on people’s lives. When they end up with eye injuries, a small proportion will go on to have permanent visual loss which can have a massive effect on their quality of life until they die.’’

The Kiwis most likely to suffer eye injuries are rural men aged between 20 and 29 years. Rural settings had almost double the rate of eye injury as urban settings and eye injury patients were 76 per cent male.

Injuries occurred most commonly at home (48 per cent), followed by commercial settings (15 per cent) and industrial

(14 per cent).

The most common injury was ‘‘struck by object’’ (55 per cent).

Prescripti­on glasses and sunglasses offered some protection, but not like proper protective eyewear, McKelvie said.

‘‘Protective eyewear is very effective and greatly reduces the chances of an eye injury,’’ he said. ‘‘And if you have an eye injury, the chance of permanent visual impairment is dramatical­ly reduced.’’

At DIY shops, goggles cost as little as $5. ‘‘They’re inexpensiv­e and incredibly effective,’’ he said. ‘‘A few dollars can prevent so much.’’

All Black Ardie Savea trialled goggles in the recent Rugby World Cup, after they were officially allowed by the sport earlier this year.

Three sports in New Zealand mandate eye protection – motorsport, clay target shooting and juvenile squash but not adult squash.

‘‘It’s strange to me that we’d have a regulation for children, when we know [squash] is high risk, and not have it for adults,’’ McKelvie said.

‘‘Why not promote the use of safety equipment that can prevent permanent visual loss?’’

McKelvie and colleagues produced two studies based on ACC injury data and more detailed informatio­n gathered from Auckland City Hospital.

One looked at ACC data on 75,601 injured children, the other at 332,418 injured adults. Both covered the 10-year period between 2007-2016.

‘‘That’s never been done on a national scale, as far as I’m aware, anywhere in the world,’’ McKelvie said.

‘‘We certainly haven’t looked at this data in this depth in New Zealand.’’

Because it’s hard to get overseas data, it’s not known how this country compares to other nations on eye injuries.

‘‘We hope this will be a useful study for people to benchmark other studies on,’’ he said.

The study of US women hockey players found severe eye and orbital injuries were reduced by 67 per cent, and severe head and face injuries were reduced by 70 per cent after goggles were introduced.

Concussion, the leading injury among these players, was not reduced.

Up to 90 per cent of eye injuries in adults may be preventabl­e through the use of protective eyewear, other researcher­s have found.

 ??  ?? Women high school hockey players in the US must wear protective eyewear.
Women high school hockey players in the US must wear protective eyewear.
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