Prevent Blindness unveils Children’s Vision Health Map, corresponding report

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According to the organization, the map and report provide public, professionals and decisionmakers with data on children’s vision issues at the county and state level.

(Image Credit: Adobestock/Alexis S/peopleimages.com)

(Image Credit: Adobestock/Alexis S/peopleimages.com)

Prevent Blindness is debuting its Prevent Blindness Children’s Vision Health Map, an online interactive tool specifically designed to display geographic variations in common children’s vision problems as well as visual impairment and blindness.1

Data used in the map was provided by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Vision and Eye Health Surveillance System and other sources from research by NORC at the University of Chicago.2,3

Currently, more than 600,000 children in the US have uncorrectable visual acuity loss, including over 45,500 who are blind. Eye conditions such as amblyopia and strabismus may be successfully treated if detected early.

“The new data from the Prevent Blindness Children’s Vision Health Map and report allows us to effectively identify and address the various eye health needs of different populations across the country,” said Donna Fishman, director of the National Center for Children’s Vision and Eye Health at Prevent Blindness. “We look forward to working with stakeholders, public health advocates and community groups to help ensure our children can enjoy a lifetime of clear and healthy vision.”

According to the organization, the purpose of the Prevent Blindness Children’s Vision Health Map is to provide the public, healthcare professionals, public health professionals, program partners, and government representatives, with county- and state-level characteristics that may impact children’s vision and eye health conditions and outcomes.

Prevent Blindness noted in its release this data can in turn support the development of policies and practices that improve systems for early detection and treatment of visual acuity loss in children.Users can easily select different visual health indicators, add filters, or explore relationships between vision health and community-level characteristics, including state child vision screening requirements, math and reading scores, health and disability measures, socioeconomic determinants of health, and eyecare providers per capita.1

(Image courtesy: Prevent Blindness)

(Image courtesy: Prevent Blindness)

“As a public health advocacy organization, part of our mission is to make the case for ensuring that vision issues are addressed appropriately, whether through public education or by shaping public policy,” Jeff Todd, president and CEO of Prevent Blindness, said in the news release. “The new Prevent Blindness Children’s Vision Health Map was created as a resource for professionals and laypeople alike to better understand the breadth of vision problems in the communities in which they live and work, along with the challenges faced in addressing them.”

The Prevent Blindness Children’s Vision Health Map is accompanied by a report, which includes the following findings and more:

  • One out of every 122 children in the United States has uncorrectable vision loss. This includes 1 out of every 137 children aged 0-11 and 1 out of every 102 children aged 12-17.
  • There are 25% more girls with vision loss than boys.
  • Non-Hispanic Black children have the highest rates of vision loss and blindness. One out of every 89 black children have vision loss, and one out of every 1,000 are permanently blind.
  • The 5 states with the highest prevalence of visual acuity loss among children were the District of Columbia, Mississippi, West Virginia, Arkansas, and Nevada.
  • Over 760,000 children enrolled in Medicaid and State Children’s Health insurance Programs (CHIP)insurance coverage were diagnosed in 2019 with either amblyopia (360,000 children) or strabismus (486,000 children).

Data from the Prevent Blindness Children’s Vision Health Map also provides new information for advocates to help advance the recently introduced Early Detection of Vision IMapirments for Children (EDVI) Act.

The act (H.R. 8400), is legislation which will provide grants from HRSA to states through a competitive process, with the funds designed to support schools, early childhood professionals, health care providers, public health professionals, and families with eye health information, updated and evidence-based vision screening methods, improve referrals to eye care, and advance follow-up protocols.4

According to Prevent Blindness, the EDVI Act will also establish a national technical assistance resource center, housed at the CDC, to promote research in preventive practices in pediatric eye disease, and encourage collaboration to support children’s eye health among federal agencies.

An overview of the report and the map will be presented at the Prevent Blindness World Sight Day Congressional Briefing on at 11:30 a.m. Thursday, September 12, in Washington, D.C., the Rayburn House Building Room 2044.

The Prevent Blindness Children’s Vision Health Map and the report is available online.

References:
  1. New Mapping Tool Provides Data for Children’s Vision and Eye Health - Prevent Blindness. Prevent Blindness. Published September 10, 2024. Accessed September 10, 2024. https://preventblindness.org/childrens-vision-mapping-tool/
  2. CDC. Vision and Eye Health Surveillance System. Vision and Eye Health Surveillance System. Published 2024. Accessed September 10, 2024. https://www.cdc.gov/vision-health-data/index.html
  3. NORC at the University of Chicago | Research You Can Trust | NORC.org. norc. https://www.norc.org
  4. Early Detection of Vision Impairments for Children (EDVI) Act of 2024 - advocacy. advocacy. Published February 28, 2024. https://advocacy.preventblindness.org/edvi-act-of-2024/
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