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The Pediatric Color Eye Chart is a 22.8" x 8.5" screening tool made from durable vinyl, designed to assess both color blindness and visual acuity efficiently in busy medical and educational settings.
C**H
The color eye chart for pediatric patients is a hit ...
The color eye chart for pediatric patients is a hit with the clinical staff.We have the children's full attention once they see this chart on the wall.It is just what the doctor needed in order to gain their full attention.
D**A
great tool!
This is an excellent tool for evaluating kids and also adults from another culture (I used it successfully in Haiti in a rural clinic) Thanks
K**L
Two Stars
It was excellent for the children especially the coloring.
N**E
Patients love it and of course it does it's job.
I use it in my chiropractic office, great for non-native speakers as well as children, plus the Adults get a kick out of it and it still serves its purpose.
D**.
Perfect size and very colorful
Exactly what we needed to do health screenings for children that couldn't read. Perfect size and very colorful!
M**G
Great product. Just as described!
I liked the product. It was just as I wanted. Very colorful and clear. Would recommend this product to anyone
M**Z
Five Stars
perfect
A**S
Should be used only for novelty purposes
The artist that made these figures just made a bunch of pictures that are the same height and placed them on one line with no regard to how the images will look once blurred. The bus in the middle of the chart is the same width as the house on the very top! It is probable that a near-sighted kid will think the cat on the second line is a turtle long before he thinks the "smaller" star is anything other than a star. This is because the cat's small tail will blur into nothingness while the fatter arms of the star will be visible with more blur. Also near-sighted kids can see red and orange objects much more clearly than green or blue ones when they are far away. This is why having different colored objects on a vision chart makes no sense. Color vision should be screened separately with an Ishihara test or other "real" color vision test. If you're not going to use an accurate vision test, then don't bother checking - send them to someone who knows what they're doing. You could seriously injure a child's vision for life by telling him and his parents that his vision is fine when it may not be.Vision charts that have proven effective for children are the Landolt C, Tumbling E or HOTV charts. If you really want to use pictures you can get a chart with Allen figures on it, as these have been used for decades and are well accepted. All figures should be black.If you're using this as a decoration or novelty gift then fine. That's the only reason I gave it two stars. As a medical device it deserves negative stars.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
2 months ago