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Prevent Blindness Asks Kids, Adults to Make Eye Protection Part of Uniform While Playing Sports

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

For more information:

Prevent Blindness, Ohio Affiliate

Amy Pulles

Phone: (614) 464-2020 ext. 119

[email protected]

 

Prevent Blindness Asks Kids, Adults to Make Eye Protection Part of Uniform While Playing Sports

Prevent Blindness Declares September as Sports Eye Safety Month in Effort to Help Keep Athletes’ Eyes Healthy

Columbus, Ohio (Aug. 30, 2019) According to the National Eye Institute, every 13 minutes an emergency room in the United States treats a sports-related eye injury. And, eye injuries are the leading cause of blindness in children in the United States, while most eye injuries among kids aged 11 to 14 occur while playing sports. Fortunately, many injuries may be avoided by wearing proper eye protection.

Prevent Blindness, Ohio Affiliate has declared September as Sports Eye Safety Month to help educate the public on the best ways to keep eyes healthy while playing sports. For those who wear prescription glasses, an eye doctor can provide a prescription for safe and effective sports protective eyewear. Monocular athletes (those with only one eye that sees well) should consult an eye doctor about what sports are safe to participate in.

“The first step towards preventing eye injuries from sports should be a visit to an eyecare professional,” said Sherry Williams, President & CEO of the Ohio Affiliate of Prevent Blindness. “An eyecare expert can recommend the best types of eye protection based on the sport and an individual’s eyecare needs.”

Eye injuries from any sport may include infection, corneal abrasions, fracture of the eye socket, swollen or detached retinas or a traumatic cataract.  Eye injuries from water sports may include eye infections and irritations, and scratches or trauma from other swimmers.

If an eye injury does occur, Prevent Blindness provides the following recommendations.

For foreign objects in the eye:

    • Do not rub the eye.

 

    • Try to let tears wash the speck out or use a commercial eyewash.

 

    • Try lifting the upper eyelid outward. Look down over the lower lid.

 

    • Do not use tweezers or other items to try and remove the speck.

 

    • If the speck doesn’t wash out, see an eye doctor immediately.

 

For blows to the eye:

    • Apply a cold compress without pressure.

 

    • Seek emergency medical care in cases of pain, blurry vision, one eye sticking out more than the other, blood inside the eye, or discoloration (black eye), which could mean internal eye damage.

 

For cuts and punctures of the eye and eyelid:

    • Do not wash out the eye with water or any other liquid.

 

    • Do not try to remove an object that is stuck in the eye.

 

    • Cover the eye with a rigid shield or the bottom half of a paper cup without pressure. Secure the shield or cup to the brow above the eye and the cheekbone below the eye without putting pressure on the eye.

 

    • Seek emergency medical care immediately.

 

Liberty Sport, Prevent Blindness and Prevent Blindness, Ohio Affiliate are once again partnering during September’s Sports Eye Safety Month.  To download free materials, including the Sports Eye Safety Guide, visit: https://www.libertysport.com/sports-eye-safety-guide. For additional educational tools on the importance of eye safety during sports, contact Angela Gerber, Liberty Sport, at (973) 882-0986 x972 or [email protected].

For more information on sports eye injury prevention, please call Prevent Blindness at 800-301-2020 or visit www.pbohio.org.

About Prevent Blindness  

Founded in 1908, Prevent Blindness is the nation’s leading volunteer eye health and safety organization dedicated to fighting blindness and saving sight. The Ohio Affiliate of Prevent Blindness is Ohio’s leading volunteer nonprofit public health organization dedicated to preventing blindness and preserving sight. We serve all 88 Ohio counties, providing direct services to more than 1,000,000 Ohioans annually and educating millions of consumers about what they can do to protect and preserve their precious gift of sight. For more information or to make a contribution, call 800-301-2020.Or, visit us on the web at www.pbohio.org or facebook.com/pbohio. Or, visit us on the Web at preventblindness.org or facebook.com/preventblindness.