Lodi News-Sentinel

Children’s vision problems often go undetected, despite calls for regular screening

- Colleen DeGuzman

Jessica Oberoi, 13, can’t exactly remember when her eyesight started getting blurry. All she knows is that she had to squint to see the whiteboard at school.

It wasn’t until last fall when her eighth grade class in Bloomingto­n, Indiana, got vision screenings that Jessica’s extreme nearsighte­dness and amblyopia, or lazy eye, were discovered.

She’s been going through intense treatment since then, and her optometris­t, Dr. Katie Connolly, said Jessica has made great improvemen­ts — but her lazy eye, which causes depth perception problems, may never go away. The chances of it being completely corrected would have been much higher if her condition had been caught earlier, said Connolly, chief of pediatric and binocular vision services at Indiana University’s School of Optometry.

Jessica is one of the countless students falling through the cracks of the nation’s fractured efforts to catch and treat vision problems among children.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that more than 600,000 children and teens are blind or have a vision disorder. A recent opinion article published on JAMA Network notes that a large number of these children could be helped simply with glasses, but because of high costs and lack of insurance coverage, many are not getting that help.

Yet the National Survey of Children’s Health, funded by the federal Health Resources and Services Administra­tion, found that in 2016-17 a quarter of children were not regularly screened for vision problems.

And a large majority of those vision impairment­s could be treated or cured if caught early, Connolly said.

“Screenings are important for kids because kids don’t realize what’s abnormal,” said Connolly. “They don’t know what their peers around them — or even their parents — are seeing to realize their experience is different.”

Eye exams for children are required under federal law to be covered by most private health plans and Medicaid. Vision screenings are mandated for school-age children in 40 states and the District of Columbia, and 26 states require them for preschoole­rs, according to the National Center for Children’s Vision and Eye Health at the nonprofit advocacy organizati­on Prevent Blindness.

Still, many children who are struggling to see clearly are being overlooked. The pandemic has only exacerbate­d the issue since classes moved online, and for many students inschool vision screenings are the only time they get their eyes checked. Even when campuses reopened, school nurses were so swamped with covid testing that general screenings had to be put to the side, said Kate King, presidente­lect of the National Associatio­n of School Nurses.

“The only kids who were getting their vision checked were the ones who were complainin­g about not being able to see,” King said.

The problem is most prevalent among preschoole­rs, according to the national center. It points out that the federal survey of children found that 61% of children 5 and younger had never had their vision tested.

Kindergart­en, Connolly said, is a critical time to check a child’s vision because not only are they old enough to cooperate with eye exams, but it’s when vision problems are more likely to be identifiab­le.

The CDC survey also found that 67% of children with private health insurance had their vision screened, compared with 43% of those who were uninsured.

Optometris­ts, physicians, and school nurses are concerned not only about children’s visual acuity, but also their ability to learn and overall quality of life. Both are strongly linked to vision.

“There seems to be an assumption that maybe if kids can’t see, they’ll just tell somebody — that the problems will sort of come forward on their own and that they don’t need to be found,” said Kelly Hardy, senior managing director of health and research for a California-based child advocacy group, Children Now. But that’s not the case most of the time.

Kaiser Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues. Together with Policy Analysis and Polling, KHN is one of the three major operating programs at Kaiser Family Foundation, an endowed nonprofit organizati­on providing informatio­n on health issues to the nation.

 ?? TYLER OLSON/DREAMSTIME ?? The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that more than 600,000 children and teens are blind or have a vision disorder.
TYLER OLSON/DREAMSTIME The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that more than 600,000 children and teens are blind or have a vision disorder.

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