Are Parents a Barrier to Contact Lens Wear by Children?
25 August 2009 - 1:17PM
PR Newswire (US)
Survey offers some insight into parents' attitudes about vision
correction JACKSONVILLE, Fla., Aug. 25 /PRNewswire/ -- Parents and
children don't always see eye to eye when it comes to vision
correction, according to a survey of parents of vision-corrected
children 8-17 years old conducted by Fairfield Research among
members of the Good Housekeeping Reader Advisory Panel on behalf of
ACUVUE Brand Contact Lenses. While more than half (56 percent) of
parents of vision corrected children who do not wear contact lenses
say that their child is interested in wearing contacts, nearly
one-third of these parents (31%) say they have never considered
contact lenses for their child, and another 27 percent say they
have not given the matter serious consideration. Parents of a child
who currently wears glasses say that their child dislikes wearing
glasses (42%), does not always wear them when he/she should (41%),
and sometimes feels self-conscious when wearing them (40%). Half
(50 percent) say that their child would rather be wearing contact
lenses. So, why are some parents reluctant to let their children
wear contacts? Four-in-ten (40 percent) parents responding to the
survey say that they are not comfortable with contact lenses for
children. Two contributing factors to parents' unwillingness to
consider contacts - 77 percent think that glasses are easier to
keep clean and take care of than contacts and half (54 percent) are
concerned about their child's ability to take care of their contact
lenses. Forty-two percent of respondents, however, say they have no
real worries about their child wearing contacts. "The growing body
of research in children's vision correction continues to
demonstrate that contact lenses provide collateral benefits to
children beyond simply correcting their vision, and that concerns
about contact lens problems in these age groups are largely
unfounded," explains Mary Lou French, O.D., F.A.A.O., M.Ed.
"Studies demonstrate that children who need refractive error
correction are capable of wearing and caring for soft contact
lenses and should be presented with the option of contact lens wear
when vision correction is required," says Dr. French, who has been
taking care of children's eyes for 32 years in her Illinois-based
practice. Two-thirds (66 percent) of survey respondents report that
whatever their eye doctor recommends is the right choice for their
child's vision correction. However, a large majority of these
parents (62 percent) believe that the choice for vision correction
should correspond with what the child wants. "Doctors will
typically evaluate a child's maturity and level of parental support
in deciding whether the child is ready for contact lenses," adds
Dr. French. Among parents surveyed, the average starting age for
contact lens wear is 13 years old. However, parents believe that
girls are ready to start wearing contact lenses at an earlier age
than boys. About one-in-five (18 percent) of survey respondents
with female children who currently wear glasses say that their
child is extremely interested in contacts, compared to only eight
percent of respondents with male children. "Research shows that for
girls, in particular, a switch from glasses to contact lenses, may
result in improvement in self-perception," says Dr. French. More
than half of parents surveyed (54 percent) agree that glasses and
contact lenses complement each other for part time wear. Overall,
41 percent of parents believe that contact lenses are a good
occasional alternative to glasses for certain activities, with 75
percent of respondents stating that contacts are a better choice
than glasses for playing sports. One-fourth of respondents (24
percent) say that their child currently wears both glasses and
contacts. Other findings from the survey, which assessed attitudes
and perceptions of parents as they relate to their children's
vision care options, included the following: -- Top areas in which
survey respondents believe that vision correction provides
improvement for their child include academic performance (78
percent), confidence (58 percent) and self-esteem (51 percent). --
The majority of parents surveyed (85%) say they are at least
"somewhat satisfied' with their child's vision correction at
school. However, only 63 percent are satisfied with their child's
current vision correction for sports. -- About nine in ten (88%)
parents whose children wear contact lenses say that their child
wears soft lenses. About half (48%) say that their child wears
lenses that are worn daily and are replaced every one to two weeks.
Another 40% say that their child wears lenses that are worn daily
and replaced monthly. Additionally, 10% say their child wears
single-use contact lenses that are worn once and then thrown away
at the end of the day. Only 2% say their child wears hard/gas
permeable contact lenses. The survey was conducted by Fairfield
Research among members of the Good Housekeeping Reader Advisory
Panel on behalf of ACUVUE Brand Contact Lenses. The purpose of the
survey was to gauge the attitudes and perceptions of parents as
they relate to their children's vision care options among a
nationally representative population of parents with
vision-corrected kids ages 8-17. Survey responses are based on a
pool of 564 responses from parents who have at least one child age
8-17 who requires vision correction. ACUVUE is a trademark of
Johnson & Johnson Vision Care, Inc. Dr. French is a paid
consultant for VISTAKON . DATASOURCE: VISTAKON, Division of Johnson
& Johnson Vision Care, Inc. CONTACT: Gary Esterow,
+1-904-629-6232, ; or Liz Mefford or Melissa Barredo of Rpr
Marketing Communications, +1-212-317-1462, /, both for VISTAKON,
Division of Johnson & Johnson Vision Care, Inc. Web Site:
http://www.jnjvision.com/
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