It has been found in multiple research studies that approximately 20% of school children have vision problems which interfere with vision and learning. The vast majority of these difficulties respond well to vision therapy. For some of the copious research, see
http://covd.org/Home/ResearchWhitePapers/ResearchonVisionTherapy/tabid/189/Default.aspx.
This is not new, nor is it a fad. Vision therapy has been around in some form since the 1700s. Just because your child does not complain, or is a good reader, does not mean he or she does not have a vision problem. Children typically will not complain unless there is pain (and often not even then), because they don't know that what they're experiencing is not normal. I frequently encounter a child who, much to the parents' dismay, reports double vision. "Why didn't you tell me?" asks Mom. "Because you
didn't ask," says the child. I was (and still am) a rabid reader despite the vision problems I had. Fortunately, I could improve my comfort by removing my distance glasses. I discovered vision therapy in optometry school when it was recommended by a professor as a cure for the blinding headaches I developed while working on the computer. I never complained to my parents--- it never crossed my mind to. I didn't even complain to my professor looking for a cure, just happened to mention it in conversation!
Those of us who provide developmental optometry care do so because we enjoy helping people, and enjoy improving the lives of children and adults in profound ways. If I had primarily wanted to make a good living in optometry, I would sell eyeglasses. Or I would have become a surgeon. The reason most of us don't take insurance is because it doesn't cover our overhead costs. Most insurance reimbursements of vision therapy services is less than the vision therapist's salary. The reason most insurances don't pay better is because there is insufficient demand from their consumers for this care. Until enough people complained, the insurance companies never covered occupational therapy, speech therapy, physical therapy either. That doesn't mean children don't require these services.
We are truly very fortunate that in the DC metro area there are many competent and caring developmental optometrists. Those previously mentioned are good and caring doctors. I don't care if there are people who don't "believe" in the work that I do, but as a doctor I do believe in making informed decisions. The science, as well as the clinical experience of myself and my colleagues, back up our work. The hospital at Bethesda Naval recently opened a new state-of-the-art facility for brain-injured soldiers, and a key part of their rehabilitation is vision therapy. Because the science backs it up.
http://visionhelp.wordpress.com/2011/03/04/do-physicians-have-a-blind-spot-when-it-comes-to-understanding-optometric-vision-therapy/
Amanda Zeller Manley, O.D.
http://www.vcdcwashington.com/