Perry Lions Club tests vision of 130 local students this week

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Perry Lions Club President John Andorf, left, prepares to test the vision of a youngster Wednesday at the Head Start program at Crossroads Church in Perry. About 130 area children will be tested by the Perry Lions this year.

The Perry Lions Club are screening the vision of about 130 Perry preschoolers this week as part of their annual participation in the Iowa KidSight program, a joint project of the Lions Clubs of Iowa and the University of Iowa Children’s Hospital’s Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences.

Iowa Kidsight brings Lions Club volunteers together throughout Iowa to conduct vision screenings in their local communities. The results of the free exams are interpreted by trained staff at University of Iowa Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences and returned to families for any needed follow up.

According to doctors, the first few years of a child’s life are critical in the development of good vision. A child’s vision should be checked yearly for conditions such as misaligned eves, cataracts and problems that need correction with eyeglasses.

“The earlier these childhood conditions are detected, the more successfully they can be treated,” said Perry Lions Club President John Andorf. “The Lions Club screenings are free for all Iowa children thanks to the volunteer efforts of Iowa Lions Clubs and the program’s sponsors.”

Iowa Kidsight aims to provide free, objective vision screening for infants and young children in all of Iowa’s 99 counties. They also seek to educate the public about the risk of undetected vision loss and identify ways to sustain similar vision screening programs across the state.

The program’s target population is children from 6 months of age through kindergarten, but the Perry Lions focus on preschool-age children. They work closely with Perry Elementary School Nurse Shelly Thompson and Head Start Nurse Tonia Lietz.

About 15 percent of the children tested by the Perry Lions will need either retesting or will receive a notification from the University of Iowa that further medical examination is called for.

The children are tested at four Perry sites: the Head Start Program at Crossroads Church, the Perry Child Development Center, the Perry Elementary School and St. Patrick’s School.

The Perry Lions Club also finances eyeglasses for low-income students lacking other sources of support, and they have a hearing aid program for older area residents.

Perry Lions Club member Ray Harden, left, and Head Start Nurse Tonia Lietz, right, manage the paperwork for some 60 Head Start students receiving the Lions Club eye exams Wednesday, while Lion Doug Volz encourages two girls waiting for their eye tests.

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