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FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
December 19, 2006
Contact: Molly Baldwin, mollybaldwin@assnhqtrs.com
Eric Grammer, ericgrammer@assnhqtrs.com
MOA
Advocates January as National Glaucoma Awareness Month
Sight
Unseen: Glaucoma Takes Sight without Warning-How to Protect Yourself
BALTIMORE-
What are you going to do differently this year? Take better care
of yourself? Will you exercise more, eat healthier, or make an effort
to see the doctor as often as you should?
Finding time in your busy schedule to implement those well-intentioned
resolutions often proves challenging. But don't underestimate the
importance of those doctor visits - and more specifically, visits
to your eye doctor.
A quick trip to your optometrist may not only be sight-saving but
potentially life-saving. Optometrists can evaluate the health of
your eyes and clarity of vision and they can also detect chronic
and systemic diseases such as glaucoma, diabetes and even hypertension.
You've probably heard of glaucoma, but many people don't know how
it can affect - and how quickly it can take - your eyesight. Glaucoma
affects more than three million Americans, but over half of them
don't even know that they have it, according to Prevent Blindness
America.
Glaucoma begins by attacking peripheral vision, typically causing
objects to appear less clearly. At first, it is possible to compensate
by squinting or turning the head to focus better. But be careful.
These changes may seem minor, but glaucoma can accelerate quickly;
causing eyesight to rapidly and irreversibly deteriorate.
Dr.
Steven Schneid, O.D., an optometrist who practices at Uptown Vision
in Washington, D.C., stresses the importance of getting a routine
eye exam. "Eye exams are crucial to maintaining healthy vision
and helping to protect against serious diseases such as glaucoma"
he explains.
Like many diseases, some factors can increase the risk of developing
glaucoma, such as age, race or genetics. Glaucoma usually affects
one in 200 people by age 50, but as many as one in 10 people by
age 80. The risk of developing glaucoma is much higher among African
Americans: four to five times higher. In fact, glaucoma is the leading
cause of blindness in African Americans. Not only do African Americans
usually develop glaucoma 10 years earlier than Caucasians, they
are also six to 15 times more likely to be blinded by the disease.
What's really alarming is that nearly 20 percent of adults have
never been to an eye doctor, and more than 60 percent of respondents
thought that glaucoma was preventable, according to the American
Optometric Association's (AOA) American Eye-Q survey. Glaucoma
cannot be prevented, but if diagnosed and treated early, it can
be controlled. This reinforces what the National Optometric Association
and the AOA already recommend: adults need regular, comprehensive
eye exams. Fortunately, Medicare covers annual glaucoma screenings
for people considered at heightened risk of developing glaucoma,
such as individuals with diabetes, those with a family history of
glaucoma, African Americans age 50 and older and Hispanic Americans
age 65 and older.
So start off the New Year right: set up an appointment with your
eye doctor - and maybe hit the gym and grab a salad on your way
home.
Authored
by Dr. Daniel Desrivieres, President of the National Optometric
Association and Dr. C. Thomas Crooks, III, President of the American
Optometric Association.
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