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Wearing
everyday street eyewear or fashion sunwear while participating in
sports minimizes the potential for eye injury.
Fact. Regular prescription eyeglasses
and fashion sunwear do not provide adequate protection and are not
held to the same performance standards as eyewear labeled for protective
use-such as Rec Specs. The lens in your child’s frames could
pop out and puncture or cut the eye or the frame itself could cause
an injury.
Only children are at a high risk
for sports-related eye injuries.
Fact. While school-aged children
between the ages of 5 to 14 represent the largest segment of sports-related
eye injuries, every athlete’s eyes are targets for an injury.
Regardless of an individual’s age or skill level, even advanced
athletes may suffer injuries as a result of aggressive play.
Contact lens wearers do not need
eye protection.
Fact. Contact lenses may give you
or your child good vision, bur no contact lens, hard or soft can protect
against eye injury. Impact to the eye can dislodge the lens or fold
over a contact lens putting an adult or child at risk for eye injury.
Wearing a helmet or faceguard
protects your children’s eyes from injuries.
Fact. Your child’s eyes are
still exposed to danger from an opponents fingers or parts of the
sports equipment that can penetrate the openings of a facemask. The
helmet can also be knocked off leaving them completely vulnerable
to injury.
Sport protective eyewear fitted
with glass or ordinary plastic lenses provide adequate protection
against injury.
Fact. Only 3mm polycarbonate lenses
are recommended for use in protective sports eyewear. Polycarbonate
lenses exceed the FDA’s impact resistance requirements by over
40 times and are the thinnest and lightest lenses available. Never
wear protective eyewear without lenses. |
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