nutch_noindex
Search Icon
    Menu Button
    Stanford Medicine Children's Health
    DonateContactMyChart LoginFind a Doctor
    • Second Opinion
    • Donate
    • Contact
    • Refer a Patient
    • En Español
    • Our Locations
    • Medical Services
    • About Us
    • Research & Innovation
    • Patients & Visitors
    • For Health Professionals
    • Second Opinion
    • Donate
    • En Español
    • MyChart Login
    • Recently Visited
      • Our Locations
      • Medical Services
      • About Us
      • Research & Innovation
      • Patients & Visitors
      • For Health Professionals
      CANCEL
      • View More Results

      Loading...

      COVID-2019 Alert

      The latest information about the 2019 Novel Coronavirus, including vaccine clinics for children ages 6 months and older.

      La información más reciente sobre el nuevo Coronavirus de 2019, incluidas las clínicas de vacunación para niños de 6 meses en adelante.

      /nutch_noindex

       


      Eye Protection Critical in Sports

      Your budding baseball star steps to the plate hoping to whack the ball—but sometimes the ball whacks back.

      Each year, thousands of children suffer sports-related eye injuries, says the American Academy of Ophthalmology (AAO) and the American Optometric Association (AOA). Sports is the leading cause of school-age children's eye injuries, but most of those injuries are preventable.

      The AAO, the AOA, and the American Academy of Pediatrics say all kids in organized sports should be encouraged to wear the correct eye protection. The AAO and the AOA, in fact, urge mandatory eye protection in school or community-sponsored sports.

      Sports-related injuries in all age groups happen most often in basketball, racquet sports, and baseball. Other high-risk sports are hockey, football, lacrosse, boxing, and soccer.

      Although eye protection can't prevent every injury, the right gear is extremely effective. (Keep in mind that proper eye protection varies from sport to sport.) According to the AAO and the AOA, 90% of sports-related eye injuries can be prevented.

      What if your kids worry that they won't play as well—or look as cool—with eye protection? Tell them basketball greats Kareem Abdul Jabbar and James Worthy, along with football star Eric Dickerson, wore eye protection.

      A vision for safety

      Here are ways to protect children’s eyes:

      • Have children's eyes checked before sports participation. If they can't see, they can't duck the puck or dodge the ball.

      • Pick the right eye guards. Each sport has its own kind, but what's most important is that the eye guards fit your child.

      • Buy prescription glasses made of polycarbonate plastic. This can withstand a projectile traveling at 90 mph.

      • For contact sports, choose eye guards or glasses with padding at the nose and brow.

      • Choose glasses with strong frames and secure them with a strap.

      • Ask your eye healthcare provider about prescription sports eye guards.

      Sports protection

      Here are protection devices recommended by Prevent Blindness America for five popular sports that can cause eye injuries in children:

      • Baseball. Use a polycarbonate face guard. This attaches to a helmet. Or, use sports eye guards.

      • Basketball. Use sports eye guards.

      • Soccer. Use sports eye guards.

      • Football. Use a polycarbonate shield attached to a face guard, or sports eye guards.

      • Hockey. Use a wire or polycarbonate mask, or sports eye guards.

      Related Topics

      • Eye Protection Critical in Sports
      • Cheerleading Safety
      • Eye Protection Keeps Kids in the Game

        nutch_noindex
        • About Us
        • Contact
        • MyChart Login
        • Careers
        • Blog
        • Refer a Patient
        • Download from App Store Download From Google Play
        • Notice of Nondiscrimination
        • Terms of Use
        • Privacy Policy
        • Code of Conduct

        © 2023 Stanford Medicine Children's Health

        About

        • About Us
        • Our Hospital
        • Patient Stories
        • Blog
        • News
        • Send a Greeting Card
        • New Hospital
        • Careers

        Connect

        • Donate
        • Refer a Patient
        • Contact Us
        • Pay Your Bill

        Find

        • Doctors
        • Locations
        • Services
        • Classes
        Download from App Store Download From Google Play

        Also Find Us on:

        • facebook
        • twitter
        • youtube
        • linkedin
        US News & World Report Badge
        • Stanford Medicine
        • Stanford University
        • Stanford Health Care
        • Lucile Packard Foundation
        • Notice of Nondiscrimination
        • Terms of Use
        • Privacy Policy
        • Code of Conduct
        • © 2023 Stanford MEDICINE Children's Health
        /nutch_noindex
        shareprint