How to help your child wear an eye patch to treat amblyopia
Help
your child understand why the patch is needed. Reward, support, and
reassure your child. This will help your child comply with the patching
treatment so that he or she can develop the best vision possible.
Here
are some of the things you can do to help your child wear the patch
and to help make the treatment more effective.
Provide information
The more your child and the people around him or her understand about
the patching as a treatment for amblyopia, the more successful the treatment
is likely to be.
- Talk to your child before treatment begins. Explain that the patch
is needed to help strengthen vision in the affected eye.
- Explain to family and friends why your child is wearing the patch
and how important it is that the patch stays on. Ask them to be supportive.
Offer suggestions on ways they can help make the treatment successful.
- If your child is in day care or school, talk with his or her caregivers
and teachers. Often they will be glad to explain to your child's peers
and classmates why he or she is wearing the patch and how they can help
your child's treatment be successful. This can help your child feel
more comfortable about wearing the patch at day care or in school.
Set clear ground rules
Avoid a power struggle or a battle of wills over wearing the patch by
setting clear guidelines and establishing realistic expectations. Your
child will probably do better if he or she understands when and how long
the patch must be worn.
- Your doctor will tell you when your child must wear the patch and
for how long. Explain the schedule to your child, and stick to it.
- Make it clear what the consequences will be if he or she removes the
patch, as well as the rewards for keeping it on without complaints or
difficulties.
- You may wish to set up a rule that only parents (or caregivers and
teachers) can touch the patch once it is on.
- If your child is to wear the patch only part of the time, use a clock
or a timer to mark when the patch is put on—and when it can come
off. This will give your child some well-defined limits and can also
help avoid making you the "bad guy" for making sure the
patch stays on for the required time.
- Use a day planner or a calendar to show your child when and how long
to wear the patch and to keep track of his or her progress. Let your
child mark each time a patching session is completed. This can provide
a visual "map" of the treatment and how much of it he
or she has accomplished.
Be supportive
Wearing a patch can be difficult and uncomfortable. By providing support
and reassurance, you can help your child comply with the patching treatment.
- Amblyopia is commonly called "lazy eye." Reassure your
child that despite the nickname, an eye with amblyopia is not actually
lazy and that he or she has not done anything wrong. A child with
amblyopia may not even realize that he or she is using only one eye.
Ignoring the image from the weak eye is the brain's unconscious response,
not the child's decision. Your child has no control over this process.
- Consider providing rewards when your child wears the patch without
complaints or difficulties. You can use a day planner or a calendar
to show your child's progress toward the reward.
- Encourage support from family, friends, and classmates. Offer suggestions
on ways they can help make the treatment successful.
- Other children might make fun of a child who has to wear a patch over
one eye. Comfort your child, but remind him or her why it is important
to keep the patch on.
Try to have some fun
Wearing an eye patch is not very enjoyable. But there are some things
you can do to make the times your child is wearing the patch more fun
and to help make the treatment more effective.
- Spend time with your child just after the patch is put on. It takes
a short time—about 10 or 15 minutes—for the brain to
adjust to having the dominant eye covered. Doing something fun during
this time can make the transition easier.
- Give your child as much one-on-one attention as possible while he
or she is wearing the patch. Your child will enjoy the time you spend
together, and this will help take his or her mind off the patch. Try
to find games and activities that capture your child's attention and
make the affected eye work harder.
- If your child is wearing adhesive-type patches, let him or her decorate
them. Check with your doctor to see if crayons, markers, stickers, or
other kinds of decorations are acceptable and how to apply them. Decorating
a patch can make your child feel better about wearing it, especially
when he or she finds that family, friends, and classmates like the decorations
too. Be careful not to put any decorations on the side of the patch
that faces the eye.
Make the weak eye work
Patching treatment for amblyopia will be more effective if your child's
weak eye has to work harder while the normal eye is patched. Games and
activities that require visual acuity and eye-hand coordination work well.
- Start with simple activities. At first, your child's coordination
may not be good because the brain is still learning how to use the
weaker eye. Easy activities will help build your child's confidence.
- Coloring books, paint books, and crafts such as cutting and pasting
are all fun activities that require good eye-hand coordination.
- Tossing beanbags or small balls (such as ping-pong balls) into buckets
or other containers can be a fun and challenging activity. Keep in mind
that with one eye patched, your child's depth perception will be reduced,
and he or she may have some difficulty with toss games.
- Picture books and reading require close visual attention. Even if
your child is not reading yet, looking at the illustrations in picture
books is a good way to make the weak eye work during patching. Spend
time reading and looking at books with your child. Have your child look
at the details of the illustrations; if he or she is learning to read,
help the child work through the text.
Help reduce any irritation
Patches may irritate the skin around the eye and may cause a light rash.
Patches on elastic bands may rub because they move more freely than adhesive
patches. Adhesive patches are preferred because they cover the normal
eye more completely. However, adhesive patches may also irritate the skin.
Talk to your doctor if your child develops an irritation or skin rash.
- Try using a hypoallergenic adhesive patch, which is less likely
to cause irritation.
- Skin ointments or lotions can be used on the skin when the patch is
removed to help reduce irritation. Other ointments can help reduce irritation
when the adhesive is on the skin.
- If the skin under the adhesive part of the patch has become irritated,
the next time a patch is put on, try covering an area around the eye
that is larger than the patch with gauze attached to the face with medical
tape. Then attach the patch to the gauze.
Try trimming away some of the adhesive part of the patch, so that there
is less of it to touch the skin. However, make sure that the normal eye
is still completely covered and that the patch will stay in place.