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InfantSEE®

Cooing, sitting up and crawling are signs that your baby is growing. Did you know her vision has stages of development too?

Most parents believe that vision is something that just develops naturally, and therefore does not need to be checked until school-age when it has already fully developed. The truth is that vision is learned—and the most critical stages of vision development occur in the first year of life.

 

AGE VISION
At Birth
  • Focus on objects less than a foot away, such as mom's face when nursing
By 3 Months
  • Follows moving objects and reaches for things
  • It is normal for a child's eyes to not always track together for first 6-8 weeks.
By 6 Months
  • Both eyes should focus equally; brainwaves can demonstrate ability to see 20/20 detail
  • Eye/body coordination skills develop
By 9 Months
  • Eye contact begins to replace physical contact
  • Eye/body coordination skills develop further
By 12 Months
  • Uses both eyes to judge distance

 

In an effort to encourage infant eye and vision assessments and ensure they are accessible to everyone, the American Optometric Association (AOA), and The Vision Care Institute of Johnson & Johnson Vision Care, Inc., and Optometry’s Charity™ – The AOA Foundation, partnered to create InfantSEE® a no-cost public health program developed to provide professional eye care for infants nationwide.

Through InfantSEE®, optometrists provide a one-time, comprehensive eye and vision assessment to babies in their first year of life, usually between the ages of 6 and 12 months, offering early detection of potential eye and vision problems at no cost regardless of income or ability to pay.

The program’s goals:

Though babies can’t talk, optometrists use their clinical education, training and experience, along with instruments such as lighted toys to provide non-invasive eye and vision assessments for infants.

The optometrist evaluates:

The doctors at Allied Vision Services are among the thousands of members of the American Optometric Association enrolled as InfantSEE® providers.

According to new data collected by the American Optometric Association (AOA) there is a growing need for early vision examination in infants. The data also showed that two groups at greater risk for visual concerns were premature babies and minority babies.

Parents may learn more about the importance of infant vision care and the InfantSEE® program by logging on to http://www.infantsee.org. Please call Allied Vision Services to schedule your baby’s InfantSEE® assessment.

Mission Statement: InfantSEE® is a public health program, to ensure that optometric eye and vision care becomes an integral part of infant wellness care to improve a child’s quality of life.

 

  1. Identify and treat risk factors that may have adverse effects on eye and vision health.
  2. Through early identification, reduce the impact of amblyopia (presently 1 in 30) and other conditions that may lead to impairments and/or loss of sight, or may also affect the child’s spatial and cognitive development.
  3. Educate parents about the importance of eye care for their children.
    1. Visual Acuity
    2. Refractive Status
    3. Eye Movement
    4. Eye Alignment/Binocular Potential
    5. Eye Health

    Though babies can’t talk, optometrists use their clinical education, training and experience, along with instruments such as lighted toys to provide non-invasive eye and vision assessments for infants.

    The optometrist evaluates:

    The doctors at Allied Vision Services are among the thousands of members of the American Optometric Association enrolled as InfantSEE® providers.

    According to new data collected by the American Optometric Association (AOA) there is a growing need for early vision examination in infants. The data also showed that two groups at greater risk for visual concerns were premature babies and minority babies.

    Parents may learn more about the importance of infant vision care and the InfantSEE® program by logging on to www.infantsee.org. Please call Allied Vision Services to schedule your baby’s InfantSEE® assessment.

    Mission Statement: InfantSEE® is a public health program, to ensure that optometric eye and vision care becomes an integral part of infant wellness care to improve a child’s quality of life.

    Baby boy playing with bubbles

    1. Identify and treat risk factors that may have adverse effects on eye and vision health.
    2. Through early identification, reduce the impact of amblyopia (presently 1 in 30) and other conditions that may lead to impairments and/or loss of sight, or may also affect the child’s spatial and cognitive development.
    3. Educate parents about the importance of eye care for their children.
      1. Visual Acuity
      2. Refractive Status
      3. Eye Movement
      4. Eye Alignment/Binocular Potential
      5. Eye Health

Dad Hugging Baby Girl 1280 x 853