Cleveland Eyecare Provides Comprehensive Eye Care for Children in Shelby, NC
My daughter is 6 months old and I brought her h... — Ainsley D. (Patient since 2016)
1 in 4 kids have a vision problem that can cause problems in learning and behavior. Early identification of a child's vision problem is crucial because, if left untreated, some childhood vision problems can cause permanent vision loss.
All children should have a yearly eye exam, starting at 6 months to 12 months old.
Pediatric exams are low stress, low demand on your child.
Pediatric exams are covered by medicaid, major medical, or vision pans.
A vision screening at school or with a pediatrician is insufficient to ensure your child's visual system is developing properly.
Dr. Street Hamrick specializes in pediatric eye care at Cleveland Eyecare in Shelby NC
In most cases we can schedule you and your child together on the same day.
Health Reform Offers Better Children's Vision Care in the U.S.
Undiagnosed and untreated vision problems among school-aged children in the United States are urgent national public health challenges[2]. When vision problems are missed by vision screening, children are often misdirected into Individualized Education Plans (IEPs) and/or ADHD treatments unaware that they actually need vision care instead.
Vision screening is not an eye exam. Vision care, now defined as annual access to eye examination and glasses, is essential to a child's overall physical, mental health, social development and educational advancement opportunities.
Our nation's historical misreliance on vision screening has plagued our education, mental health and juvenile justice systems for too long, serving as major contributive factors to children's inability to perform and conform to the demands of school and society. With an estimated 75 to 90 percent of all classroom learning coming to students via the visual pathways, nearly all tasks a child is asked to perform in the classroom depend on good visual skills; visual skills that can only be assessed through a comprehensive optometric eye examination[4] and are significant contributors to early reading difficulties and ultimately to special education classification.
Vision screening, by falsely telling too many children that they have no vision problem, when they actually do, has long closed the door to vision health and education opportunities, especially for children from families whose socio-economic status is at or below 400 percent Federal Poverty Level (FPL), already burdened by being 3 times more likely to have permanent vision problems, by going without vision examination.[6]. Research shows that children with Individualized Education Plans (IEPs), in the age range of 6- 16 years, and juvenile offenders, have high rates of undiagnosed and untreated eye problems including hyperopia (farsightedness) affecting reading speed and comprehension. The research concludes that all students being considered for an IEP should have a comprehensive eye examination, because often all the student requires is optometric treatment