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BELLAIRE FAMILY EYE CARE
Our contact lens department serves all ages from toddlers through seniors and all ages between. As new technologies allow for better quality contact lens materials and innovative designs of optical corrections, each year more and more people are able to wear contact lenses who desire them than ever before.
With newer, simple to use contact lenses, children are beginning to wear contact lenses at a much earlier time than their parents did 20 or 30 years ago. The first requirement is a desire by the child or teenager to wear contacts. If a parent wants their child to have contacts but the child doesn’t, it’s too early. Best to wait until the child is requesting contacts. Secondly, the child must be responsible enough to take on the duties of inserting and removing the lenses. At what age this occurs varies greatly. Sometimes this is age 8 other times age 15. On average, children are usually ready around age 10 or 11. At times, there may be a need to put a young child into contacts for medical reasons. In these instances, we work closely with the parent and child to make this process as easy as possible. With the help of a supportive parent, very young children can wear contacts when needed. Our philosophy when working with any new wearer is to help them become as successful with contacts and as independent with them as soon as possible. When fitting children and young teens, they are usually highly motivated and the whole experience is one of excitement and success. Responsibility usually blossoms in the process!
If you are seeking an alternative to corrective surgery and want a reversible procedure, there are contacts that you can sleep in that will correct your vision when you wake-up. These specially designed gas permeable contact lenses are slept in every night allowing you to be free from glasses or contacts from morning to night the next day. If you choose not to wear them, the eye will return back to it original shape in a few days. The procedure is only affective for patients that are nearsighted without a significant amount of astigmatism. Notice of Privacy Practices |