HOMEPrevious PageContact UsRSS RSS Feed
Advertiser Index
Going Out
Shopping
Health
Youth
Real Estate
Faith
Health & Wellness May 2, 2008
Search Archives


Protect your eyes during sports

What do David Beckham, Lance Armstrong and Richard Hamilton all have in common besides being superstar athletes? They all keep their eyes from harm with protective eyewear.

The arrival of spring and longer days bring more participation in outdoor sports and with them the increased danger of eye injuries.

The California Optometric Association urges even casual athletes, especially children, to protect their sight by keeping street eyewear off the playing field and by wearing protective eyewear instead.

Some statistics to keep in mind:

•More than 42,000 sportsrelated eye injuries required emergency room attention.

•An estimated 13,500 cases result in permanent loss of sight.

•Approximately 72 percent of sports-related eye injuries occur in people younger than 25 and 43 percent occur in children younger than 15.

Conventional frames and lenses do not meet the minimum safety requirements for impact resistance in contact intensive sports such as basketball, baseball, tennis, soccer, water polo and football. In the event of a collision, normal lenses can easily pop out and puncture or cut the eye, or a mangled frame could damage the ocular region.

A regular frame is not tested against impact; it has screws and other small pieces. Besides not offering much defense from a baseball, these pieces can scratch or penetrate the eye.

A quality pair of sport eyewear, equipped with polycarbonate lenses in a onepiece construction, can be a sight saver and prevent small collisions from becoming sight-threatening injuries. Today's protective eyewear comes in an array of poplar styles and colors that children and parents are happy to wear.

This article provided by California Optometric Association.


Click ads below
for larger version