Golfer247 - The latest news and products from the world of golf
Main Menu | News By Date | News By Supplier | News By Category | About Us
 

EARLY VISION TESTS HELP CURE CHILDHOOD EYE PROBLEMS
28 April 2007 - University of Bristol

The long-standing debate over the need for toddlers' eye tests is re-awakened by a new research paper published by the Children of the 90s project. Controversially, pre-school screening for amblyopia, or lazy eye, has been abandoned in much of the UK on the grounds that it can be done more effectively at school age and that age at starting treatment is irrelevant.

Amblyopia is a condition that affects 3 per cent of children and is normally treated with an eye patch. If it goes untreated until age 7 or 8, the sight in the weaker eye will never improve.

Researchers from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children, based at the University of Bristol, examined the eyesight of 6,000 children at the age of 7½.

Of those children, almost 25 per cent had been offered pre-school screening at the age of three, and two thirds of them (16.7 per cent of the total) had attended. All children had been screened when they started school, as is currently recommended by the NHS.

We found that by the age of 7½, the children with amblyopia who had been tested and treated at 3 got better results in vision tests. The prevalence of amblyopia was 45 per cent lower in the children who had received the 3-year eye test.

But because only two thirds of children actually attended for their eye test at the age of three, Dr Cathy Williams says it raises doubts about the practicalities and overall population benefit of testing at three rather than at school entry.

"On a population level, the 3-year eye tests made little difference to the total numbers of children with sight problems by the age of 7, because a third of children who were offered the early test did not attend.

"The results emphasise that the patching treatment is more effective the earlier it is given, but it is also important to make sure that any screening test is actually received by all of the population, in order to make a real impact on the numbers of children with sight problems persisting into later childhood. Future eye test programmes need to take account of both factors."

http://www.bris.ac.uk

About: University of Bristol
The University College of Bristol opened in 1876, after six years of discussions and controversy, in a bid to bring university culture to the provinces. It was the first college in the country to admit men and women on an equal footing.

The University’s Research and Enterprise Development (RED) division was launched in 2000 to stimulate and support an entrepreneurial culture and encourage the growth of technology-based business.

2003 saw the completion of the Dorothy Hodgkin building, named after the University’s fifth Chancellor. The £18 million building is dedicated to research in neuroendocrinology. 2003 also saw the opening of the University’s £5 million Centre for Sport, Exercise and Health.

Work on a new, state-of-the-art engineering building is due to be completed in early 2004. The £20 million BLADE project (Bristol Laboratory for Advanced Dynamics Engineering) will bring together the Engineering Faculty’s six departments to establish Europe’s most advanced dynamics engineering research facilities.


More News:
  • For April 2007
  • From University of Bristol
  • For Superconductors

 

©2008 New Materials International