Daily Mail

1.2m drivers with poor eyesight on our roads

- By James Salmon Transport Editor

UP to 1.2million people with poor eyesight could be driving illegally, a report warns.

Almost half of optometris­ts (44 per cent) have seen a patient in the last month who still drives despite being told their vision is below the legal standard.

This could equate to around 1.2million motorists, according to the Associatio­n of Optometris­ts, which commission­ed a poll of 1,246 of its members.

Some 262 people were injured in crashes on the roads last year where poor eyesight was a contributo­ry factor, figures show. Despite this a separate survey of 1,386 drivers by the AOP found 42 per cent would continue to drive even if they were told their vision could not be corrected to meet the legal standard. The AOP said the Government must toughen the law on vision testing for motorists.

Children born in the summer are nearly twice as likely to become short-sighted than those born in autumn, winter or spring, scientists have found.

A team at King’s College London tracked 2,000 children born in the 1990s. By the age of 17 a quarter had developed shortsight­edness. And the summerborn were 93 per cent more likely to have the condition.

The team told the British Journal of Ophthalmol­ogy they believe this is because they start school younger and are reading and writing before their eyes have fully developed.

‘Toughen the law’

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