Healthy isn?t something you are or aren?t. It?s a hundred little things: eating a banana, walking in the park, putting a bandage on a boo-boo, playing tag, reading up on ways to keep you and your family well and safe. It?s a balance between living well and taking care, and you can start right where you are.
A blog by Christina Elston
Healthy isn't something you are or aren't. It's a hundred little things: eating a banana, walking in the park, putting a bandage on a boo-boo, playing tag, reading up on ways to keep you and your family well and safe. It's a balance between living well and taking care, and you can start right where you are.


Posts Tagged ‘myopia’

Eye Exams: What to Expect

Wednesday, June 10th, 2009

Editor’s note: Ever wonder what the optometrist is looking at when she looks into your child’s eyes? Whether your child’s vision is up to par? Here’s a thorough look at children’s vision and vision exams from Kristina Tarczy-Hornoch, M.D., director of the Vision Development Institute at The Vision Center at Childrens Hospital of Los Angeles. The Vision Center is an international referral center for children afflicted with all forms of eye disease and provides both inpatient and outpatient services. It is the largest pediatric ophthalmology program in the nation.

eye-examDoes your child have an eye problem that has gone undiagnosed?

Some parents, particularly those who are uninsured, may be tempted to wait until their child is examined under a school-district program. However, school screening sometimes leads to late diagnosis of vision problems, and may not identify all types of vision problems.

While your family physician or pediatrician can perform some basic parts of the eye exam, if you have any doubts about your child’s vision, you should obtain a comprehensive eye examination from either an ophthalmologist (a medical doctor specializing in diseases and surgeries of the eye) or an optometrist (an eye care provider with a degree in optometry). These vision specialists will have advanced tools and procedures to complete a thorough examination of your child’s eyes. Reasons to get a comprehensive eye exam include abnormal eye movements, crossed or drifting eyes, or failing to make or maintain eye contact at an early age. Read on …

From the Wire – February 2

Monday, February 2nd, 2009

Get Outside And Do Your Eye Exercises

Spending time outdoors is good for the body, the soul, and the eyes, according to a report in the January issue of Optometry and Vision Science. Specifically, spending two or three hours a day outside can lower a child’s chances of developing myopia (nearsightedness, which impacts about 33% of U.S. adults). The report found that, for a child with two myopic parents, the chances of becoming myopic dropped from 6 in 10 to just 2 in 10 if they spent 14 or more hours per week outdoors. Researchers aren’t yet sure exactly why, but increased exposure to sunlight and additional time spent looking at things from a distance are possibilities. Check out a great vision site for kids …

FDA Says Ditch the Darvocet

It’s been on the market for 50 years, and more than 20 million prescriptions for it were written in 2007. Yet an FDA advisory panel voted Jan. 30 to recommend a ban on Darvon, now marketed mainly as Darvocet (which pairs it with acetaminophen), according to Associated Press reports. Encouraging the ban is the Public Citizen’s Health Research Group, whose director, Sidney Wolfe, M.D., testified before the committee. Wolfe pointed out that the drug was found to be a factor in 503 deaths in 2007, and that the FDA itself had concluded the drug wasn’t more effective than acetaminophen alone as a pain reliever and has significant potential for addiction and abuse. The U.K. banned the drug in 2006. Learn more …

Moms: Take Your Maternity Leave!

Taking time off work, both before and after baby is born, isn’t just good for Mom according to new research from UC Berkeley. It’s best for Baby, too. One study of 447 Southern California women working full time found that those who took leave before the birth (prior to the 35th week of pregnancy) were four times less likely to have a C-section than those who worked through to their delivery. That study is in the January/February edition of Women’s Health Issues. Another study, in the January issue of Pediatrics, found that women who took less than six weeks of leave after the birth were four times as likely to fail to establish breastfeeding as those still on leave 16 weeks postpartum. Yet only California, Hawaii, New Jersey, New York and Rhode Island offer some form of paid maternity leave, and none fully replace a woman’s salary. Learn more …