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Home General News

Parents must control their children’s usage of electronic devices

Ghana Optometric Association (GOA)

Myliberty Media by Myliberty Media
November 4, 2022
in General News, Headlines, Health, Top Stories
Reading Time: 3 mins read
Dr Alfred Gardemor and the GNA Tema Team

Dr Alfred Gardemor and the GNA Tema Team

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Tema-Ghana, Nov. 4, MNN – Dr. Alfred Gardemor, Principal Optometrist at the Nsawam Government Hospital has called on parents and guardians to control the usage of electronic devices by children to safeguard their eyes from conditions of short-sightedness.

Instead of keeping children indoors and allowing them to watch cartoons on either the television or their tablets and laptops, parents must encourage them to play outside at least for one to two hours.

Dr Gardemor who is the Public Relations Officer of the Ghana Optometric Association (GOA) said this at the Ghana News Agency-Tema Regional Office and the Ghana Optometric Association fortnightly public sensitization initiative “GNA-GOA: My Eye! My Vision!

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The fortnight initiative is a collaborative public education advocacy campaign to promote the need for people to access eye care and also to draw attention to vision health, which was monitored by the Communication for Development and Advocacy Consult (CDA Consult) in Tema.

The GNA-GOA: My Eyes! My Vision! The initiative also seeks to challenge the public and policymakers to focus on vision as a health issue, which forms a critical component of mankind’s wellbeing but is often neglected.

Speaking on the topic; “Children’s Vision and Eye Health,” Dr. Gardemor explained that excessive exposure of children to television, laptops, tablets and phones among others can lead to myopia (short-sightedness) among children.

Dr. Gardemor, therefore, indicated that playing outside helps the eyes to relax and prevent myopia as the eyes would not be limited or only focused on the screen for a long time.

Dr. Gardemor further explained that “with this, the eyes can relax as the eyes will look far away, unlike being exposed excessively to screen.”

Throwing light on the need for children’s eye care to be taken seriously, he said even though children have very sensitive eyes, most people especially in developing countries tend to think that children were too little to receive eye care.

He said it was extremely important to take eye care in children seriously as regular and periodic screening for them could help in early detection, diagnosis, and treatment instead of waiting till some damages had already been caused and could not be reversed in adulthood.

He said eye conditions in children such as cataracts, glaucoma, amblyopia also known as lazy eye, refractive errors, misalignment, and other congenital eye conditions could be handled early in life.

He, therefore, advised parents to get a first eye screening for their children from age six months, with a second one at age one, or three, before pre-school and periodically to avoid future conditions and to detect any anomalies early for correction as some of the condition could not be corrected with time.

Francis Ameyibor and Alfred Gardemor
Francis Ameyibor and Alfred Gardemor

Dr. Gardemor stressed that parents must know that eye screening was in the best interest of the child as their inability to see well would affect their schooling as most children with learning disorders might have some eye disorders that were yet to be identified.

He said for instance the detection and treatment of amblyopia or lazy eyes by age seven were more effective as after that age a lot of development in the eye might have been already established.

He explained that amblyopia occurred in one eye due to a breakdown in the communication between the eyes and the brain making the brain rely more on the eye for a stronger vision.

Mr. Francis Ameyibor, GNA-Tema Regional Manager explained that the two professional bodies have agreed to work together on a public sensitization campaign dubbed: “GNA-GOA: My Eyes! My Vision” to draw attention to vision health.

“We are combining the forces of our professional calling as Optometric Physicians and Communication Experts to reach out to the public with a well-coordinated message.

“We believe such collaboration would serve as a major platform to educate the public on vision health and also serves as a critical stage for the association to reach out to the world,” Mr. Ameyibor noted.

 

Source: Myliberty News Network
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