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Feature: Manatee in Cedar Key
September 30th, 2012

Columns: Stormceptors - What’s the big deal anyway?
September 29th, 2012

Columns: A FLORIDA CRACKER TALE - "A Trip to Fort Basinger"
September 29th, 2012

Columns: Trouble in Cedar Key - The Pigeons of Castillo de San Marcos
September 28th, 2012

City News: New City Commisioner Selected
September 28th, 2012

Features: Candidate Q and A Hosted in Cedar Key
September 27th, 2012

Announcements: Cedar Key Lions Commemorate 6 years of Adopt-a-Highway
September 27th, 2012

Announcements: Planning for Coastal Change in Levy County – UF students set to begin public outreach campaign in Levy County
September 26th, 2012

Columns: ASK A LAWYER - CAN I CARRY A GUN WHEN I DRIVE TO OTHER STATES?
September 25th, 2012

Law Enforcement News: Levy County Arrest Report 9/24/2012
September 24th, 2012

Conservation: Energy’s High Cost on Our Water
September 24th, 2012

Announcements: District 1 Candidate Jamie Griffin will use business skills as County Commissioner
September 23rd, 2012

Announcements: Candidates Forum - September 25, 2012
September 23rd, 2012

Announcements: Lions KidSight Early Childhood Vision Screening Comes to Levy County
September 22nd, 2012

Announcements: Fisher House Coming to VA in Gainesville Medical Center to Hold Groundbreaking Ceremony
September 22nd, 2012

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Lions KidSight Early Childhood Vision Screening Comes to Levy County

Lions KidSight Early Childhood Vision Screening Comes to Levy County

Rory Brennan

Cedar Key, Florida. Cedar Key Lions Club members have been in training to operate early childhood vision screening equipment to identify children up to 6 years old with undetected vision loss due to Amblyopia factors (Lazy Eye) and refractive errors.

Ambylopia is easy to treat, but early detection before the age of 6 is vital, as correction must take place before the age of six while a child`s visual system is still developing.

KidSight, a Lions International program, has now expanded into Levy County with the Cedar Key Lions Club working in collaboration with the University of Florida Pediatric Ophthalmology Department.


Cedar Key Lions Train on the KidSight Screening equipment

Through this partnership, Lions Club volunteers and UF vision professionals offer free of charge screening at area preschools and daycare centers.

Lions Club members are trained to conduct the vision screenings. Lions volunteers arrange the screening sessions and use a special hand-held camera that takes digital photographs of the eyes that is used by the University of Florida to identify potential vision problems.

After the Lions Club conducts the screening, the screening information is sent to the University of Florida Pediatric Ophthalmology Department where screening results are interpreted for possible vision problems. After the screening photographs have been interpreted, results are reported back to families.

Parents receive a notification form that tells them that their child passed the screening, or the photo was unreadable, that a borderline or mild problem was detected, or a vision problem was identified and their child should be examined by a specialist.

Cedar Key Lions KidSight coordinator Judy Duvall says, "Our free screening is conducted at any child care center in Levy County that requests one. We do it wherever the kids are, be they daycare centers, kindergartens or preschools. Our goal is to screen every child aged 1-5 in Levy county. "

"KidSight screening is so important, because it goes beyond the regular vision screening provided in schools. With specialized KidSight equipment that the Cedar Key Lions Club has helped purchase, we can detect children`s vision problems early, giving the child an opportunity for having a good start of going through school with their vision corrected,"
she explained.

Cedar Key Lions members attended a special three-hour training session to learn proper operation of the camera and how to check the child`s information form. "The screening itself is quick and easy. It`s as simple as taking a picture. It takes five minutes and the life-long effect that it can have an a child`s vision is well worth our volunteer time." remarked Duvall.

In areas of the country where the Lions KidSight program has been running, tens of thousands of children have been screened with hundreds of children aged 1 through 6 diagnosed early enough for treatment to correct their vision before it was too late.

To schedule a vision screening clinic, call Levy County KidSight coordinator, Lion Judy Duvall at (352) 507-1177.

More information on the Lions KidSight program can be found at http://www.peds.ufl.edu/kidsight

A moving video in a parent`s own words on how the Lions KidSight screening saved her pre-school child`s vision can be seen at http://www.peds.ufl.edu/kidsight/family-resources.asp

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