Eye Concers for Babies | Bausch + Lomb

Eye Concers for Babies

Even in the womb babies can tell the difference between light and dark. And at birth, they see shapes by following the lines where light and dark meet. Yet, they are several weeks old before they can see their first primary colour – red.

In their first weeks and months, babies learn to use their eyes – actually their eyes “learn” how to see. While each eye has the physical structure it needs to begin to see normally, the two eyes haven’t learned to work together yet – and this “binocular vision” develops quickly throughout the first few weeks and months of life.

Can I Stimulate My Baby's Eye Development?

In this critical first year, your baby’s brain and eyes begin to co-ordinate images and remember what they’ve seen. As a parent, you can participate in your newborn’s eye development and health as a normal part of your time with your baby. Proper stimulation can increase curiosity, attention span, memory, and nervous system development. So be sure to give your baby plenty of interesting things to see.

The First Three Months of Eye Development

Newborns can only focus about sixteen to 24cm from their face, and they see only black, white and gray. As early as the first week, your baby begins to respond to movement and begins to focus on your face. Soon your baby will smile when you come close. This is an important sign that your baby sees and recognises you – a joyful moment for any parent. Over the next ten to 12 weeks, you will notice your baby following moving objects and recognising things, especially toys and mobiles with bold, geometric patterns. As their colour vision begins to develop, babies will see red first – they will see the full spectrum of colours by the time they reach three months of age.

When Do Babies Begin To See Clearly?

Depth perception and eye-hand coordination begin to develop when babies reach four months. From four to six months, your baby begins to reach out and touch an object – something that previously only happened by chance. By six months, your child’s vision can already be as good as 20/20, which is what we commonly think of as “normal.” You’ll see how eyesight becomes a crucial element in your baby’s ability to coordinate full-body movements such as standing and walking.

When Does a Baby's Hand Eye Coordination Develop?

From eight to 12 months, the connection between eyes, movement, and memory is strong as your baby approaches their first birthday. In the past year you’ve probably noticed tremendous improvements in your baby’s attempts to roll a ball, pick up small toys and objects, and feed themselves foods like cereal or sliced fruit. Activities that encourage hand-eye coordination, like playing with stacking boxes and rings, blocks or snap-together toys, will help strengthen your baby’s ability to see an object, touch it, and remember things about it.

Your Baby’s Eye Health

The best way to help keep your baby's eyes healthy is through regular professional eye examinations. So have your baby's eyes examined – shortly after birth.

Are There Benefits for the Eye From Breast Feeding?

According to a study published in the February issue of American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, “babies who are breast-fed have significantly better vision as young children than babies fed from formula.” Because scientists have previously hypothesised that the chemical known as docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) – found in higher concentrations in breast milk than in formula – enhances the vision of developing children, the researchers randomly added DHA to the formulas of some of the non-breast-fed children.

Related Articles

Your Child's Vision Development

There’s so much for your child to see and experience during their first years. And while the eye's greatest physical development occurs during the first year...

Know More

Eye Development

It’s helpful to know how the eyes work, to understand how the eye’s parts function together to bring clear images to your brain – and how these parts change ...

Know More

Your Baby's Eye Exam

The best way to protect your baby's eyes is through regular professional examinations. Certain infectious, congenital, or hereditary eye diseases may be pres...

Know More

Your Childs Eye Exam

Vision problems affect one in 20 preschoolers and one in four school-age children. And since many vision problems begin at an early age, it’s very important ...

Know More

Teens Eye Exam

The best way to preserve and protect your vision is through regular professional eye examinations. For teenagers, if corrective lenses are needed, it’s also ...

Know More

Eye Exams

A regular eye exam is the best way to protect your eyesight—and an easy precaution to take. It is particularly important if you notice a change inyour vision...

Know More

Eye Exams for People Over 60

As we age, eye exams become even more important. Vision problems may develop with no physical symptoms until they’re quite advanced. When you see your o...

Know More

5 Uncommon Eye Conditions That Ophthalmologists Treat

Ophthalmologists treat diseases like near-sightedness, farsightedness, cataracts, and macular degeneration regularly. These are some of the most

...

Know More

Understanding The Different Stages Of Eye Development

Although eye and vision disorders in new-born babies are rare, parents can look for the following indicators that could suggest a problem.

...

Know More