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What Is Vision Therapy?
Visual Training
Optometric vision therapy, sometimes called vision therapy
or VT, is that part of optometric care devoted to developing,
improving and enhancing people's visual performance.
Over several decades, behavioral optometrists have developed and
used vision therapy-in combination with appropriate, judiciously
selected lenses-to:
Prevent vision and eye problems from
developing
Develop the visual skills needed to achieve more effectively
at school, work or play
Enhance functioning on tasks demanding sustained visual
effort
Remediate or compensate for vision and eye problems which
have already developed |
Through vision therapy, people are able to develop more efficient
visual performance.
Vision: A Set of Abilities
Nearly all humans are born with the potential for good eyesight,
but vision-the ability to identify, interpret and understand what
is seen-is learned and developed, starting from birth.
In learning to walk, a child begins by creeping, crawling,
standing, walking with assistance, and finally, walking unaided. A
similar process from gross to fine motor control takes place in
the development of vision.
One visual skill builds on another, step-by-step as we grow. But
many people miss a step, or do not complete a step, or must begin
to perform school or other visually demanding tasks before an
acceptable foundation of basic visual skills is in place.
Science indicates that we do not "see" with our eyes or our brain;
rather, vision is the reception and processing of visual
information by the total person. Since two-thirds to 80% of all
information we receive is visual, it becomes clear that efficient
visual skills are a critical part of learning, working and even
recreation. Athletes, for example, use vision therapy for improved
performance in their sport.
Developing visual skills includes learning to use both eyes
together effectively. Having both eyes move, align, fixate and
focus as a team enhances your ability to interpret and understand
the potential visual information that is available to you.
Intelligent persons who are very highly motivated can be good
achievers, even with very poor visual skills and abilities, but at
untold cost in wasted energy and unnecessary effort and stress.
For those who are less motivated, even one or two deficient visual
skills can produce enough stress and frustration to create a
nonachiever.
What Are the Visual Skills?
The visual skills which can be developed and enhanced through
vision therapy include:
Tracking. The ability to follow a moving object smoothly
and accurately with both eyes, such as a ball in flight or moving
vehicles in traffic.
Fixation. The ability to quickly and accurately locate and
inspect with both eyes a series of stationary objects, one after
another, such as moving from word to word while reading.
Focus Change. The ability to look quickly from far to near
and vice versa without momentary blur, such as looking from the
chalkboard to a book or from the dashboard to cars on the street.
Depth Perception. The ability to judge relative distances
of objects and to see and move accurately in three-dimensional
space, such as when hitting a ball or parking a car.
Peripheral Vision. The ability to monitor and interpret
what is happening around you while you are attending to a specific
central visual task; the ability to use visual information
perceived from over a large area.
Binocularity. The ability to use both eyes together,
smoothly, equally, simultaneously and accurately.
Maintaining Attention. The ability to keep doing any
particular skill or activity with ease and without interfering
with the performance of other skills.
Near Vision Acuity. The ability to clearly see, inspect,
identify and understand objects at near distances, within arm's
length.
Distance Acuity. The ability to clearly see, inspect,
identify and understand objects at a distance. People with 20/20
distance sight still may have visual problems.
Visualization. The ability to form mental images in your
"mind's eye," retain or store them for future recall, or for
synthesis into new mental images beyond your current or past
direct experiences.
Visual Skills/Visual Stress
If a person's visual skills are not adequately developed, or a
person fails to coordinate vision with other senses, vision
problems may occur.
With poor binocularity, for example, one eye may locate an object
in one place while the other eye locates it in another. The
confusing signals may result in:
Headaches. Especially near the eyes or forehead, or
occasionally at the back of the head.
Double Vision. Two objects are seen when only one exists.
Reduced Performance. Losing your place while reading,
rereading words or lines, difficulty with understanding or
recalling what you've read, reading slowly.
Discomfort, Fatigue. Body tension, stress or pain;
weariness at the end of a school or work day.
Suppression. Information from one eye may be blocked or
ignored to avoid seeing double. If the visual problem is not
corrected, it may get worse.
Nearpoint visual stress, the result of sustained visual activities
done at less than arm's length, may produce most of the problems
listed above.
There are many other common eye and visual problems which can
limit the way you live and enjoy life. These include:
Nearsightedness. Myopia-seeing more easily at near than at
distances.
Farsightedness. Hyperopia-seeing more easily at distances
than at near.
Strabismus. Crossed eyes.
Amblyopia. Lowered visual acuity (clarity), not correctable
to normal acuity with lenses.
Astigmatism. Distorted vision-interferes with seeing
clearly at any distance without effort.
Poor Vision-Body Movement Coordination. Clumsiness,
awkwardness, inefficient eye-hand or eye-body coordination, poor
handwriting.
Vision therapy, usually combined with appropriate lenses, may
remedy, improve or prevent any of these conditions in both
children and adults.
Vision therapy and lenses are intended to alleviate the symptoms
and eliminate the underlying cause-inadequate visual skills and
visual stress.
Studies show that success in vision therapy depends on an
appropriate program prescribed by your optometrist, and on an
individual patient's cooperation, participation and motivation.
Beyond Visual Performance
Vision therapy also has proven to be a remarkably effective tool
in helping people with learning-related visual problems. Many
problems in learning to read and write are made worse by poorly
developed visual skills.
Dozens of experimental programs involving thousands of children
and adults demonstrate that when visual skills are enhanced
through vision therapy, learning is easier, reading levels rise,
and in some cases, IQ scores have increased.
Building visual skills also increases the ability to visualize,
conceptualize and to create. Dr. Johan Petalozzi, a Swiss
education reformer, notes that "conceptual thinking is built on
visual understanding."
The American Optometric Association's 1994 Clinical Practice
Guidelines on Comprehensive Adult Eye and Vision Examination
reports: "Of all the sensory information relayed to the brain,
four-fifths is visual in origin."
What is a Behavioral Optometrist?
Behavioral optometrists spend years in post-graduate, continuing
education to master the complex visual programs prescribed to
prevent or eliminate visual problems and enhance visual
performance.
Not all optometrists practice behavioral optometry, which includes
developmental and functional optometry. If you do not now have an
optometrist who practices behavioral optometry, make sure you
receive a "Yes" answer to each of the following questions before
you make an appointment..
1. Do you provide a full series of
nearpoint vision tests?
2. Do you provide work- or school-related visual perception
tests?
3. Do you provide full vision care and vision therapy in
your office, or will you refer me to a colleague if needed?
4. Will you see me again during the year, and periodically
to determine my progress? |
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