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Pre-Teen Children Succeed With Daily Disposable Contacts

Contact Lens Headlines

Date: November 4, 2009 // Author: Gary Heiting, OD

A study published in a recent issue of Eye & Contact Lens indicates that children ages 8 to 12 are able to successfully wear daily disposable contacts and that most children in the study preferred wearing contact lenses to wearing eyeglasses.

The three-month study was conducted in Singapore, following a protocol similar to the recent Contact Lenses in Pediatrics (CLIP) study in the United States that found similar results among teenagers.

Participants in the study were fit with 1-Day Acuvue and 1-Day Acuvue for Astigmatism disposable contacts. All children were nearsighted (with or without astigmatism) and had not worn contact lenses prior to the study.

Of the 59 children enrolled, 53 (90 percent) completed the study successfully. At the end of the three-month study period, most of the children and their parents reported preferring the contact lenses to eyeglasses for a variety of reasons, including vision, comfort and appearance.

No eye infections occurred during the study, and the only adverse event noted was the development of a chalazion in one child’s eyelid.

(Many eye doctors recommend daily disposable contacts for children who want to wear contact lenses because the single-use lenses eliminate the need for daily lens care and contact lens solutions.)

Eye & Contact Lens is the official journal of the Contact Lens Association of Ophthalmologists.

Tags: contacts for children, disposable contacts


 

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