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Healthy Vision Month --- May 2005
May is Healthy Vision Month. In the United States, an estimated 80 million persons have potentially blinding
eye diseases, one million are blind, and 3 million have low vision
(1). The leading causes of blindness and uncorrectable
vision loss in the United States are age-related eye diseases, including macular degeneration, glaucoma, cataract, and diabetic retinopathy. The number of U.S. residents aged
>40 years with age-related eye diseases is expected to increase
by approximately 40% by 2020 (2).
Vision objectives are a new focus area in Healthy People
2010. Healthy Vision 2010 addresses the vision objectives
that include visual impairment, regular eye examinations for children and adults, vision screening for preschool children, injury prevention, and vision rehabilitation
(1). Healthy Vision 2010 materials designed to educate the public and
health-care providers are available at http://www.healthyvision2010.org.
CDC collaborates with the National Eye Institute through
Healthy People 2010 and the National Eye Health
Education Program. In addition, CDC has developed a program to increase public and professional awareness of efforts to
reduce visual impairment and eye diseases. CDC also engages in applied public health
research to enhance eye health.
References
US Department of Health and Human Services. Healthy people 2010 (conference ed, in 2 vols). Washington, DC: US Department of
Health and Human Services; 2000. Available at
http://www.health.gov/healthypeople.
Eye Diseases Prevalence Research Group. Causes and prevalence of visual impairment among adults in the United States. Arch
Ophthalmol 2004;122:477--85.
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