
Your child’s visual acuity evolves rapidly, and ophthalmic conditions can go unnoticed if early screening is not anticipated.
To guide families, we rely on the Optikid 2025 Report on children’s eye health, to which several specialized ophthalmologists contributed, including Dr. Stéphanie Zwillinger, who shares a strong and committed analysis on visual prevention from the very first year of life.
In a context where screens, online misinformation, and delayed consultations complicate eye care, understanding the true challenges of children’s eye health in 2025 has become essential to protecting their visual future.
Discover now what every parent should know to act early, detect warning signs, and offer the best possible protection for their children’s eye health.
The Optikid study on children’s eye health in 2025 highlights the testimony of Dr. Stephanie Zwillinger, a leading figure in pediatric ophthalmology.
She dreams of adding a dedicated page in the health record booklet: “ophthalmologic examination – one year,” to emphasize the importance of a systematic visit to the ophthalmologist during the first year of life.
She also describes the increasing difficulty of fighting misinformation. Between misleading online tutorials about conjunctivitis or “homemade remedies” popularized on social media, parents often feel lost.
This is why she multiplies explanatory notes, studies, and professional advice to restore reliable and safe information.
Her balance in consultation relies on two pillars: reassuring without minimizing, and reminding parents that the next appointment is never “optional.”
Finally, she highlights the collective role of all field professionals: educators, school principals, child psychiatrists, orthoptists, opticians… All contribute to placing prevention at the right pace to prevent untreated anomalies from becoming long-term visual disabilities.
Protecting children’s eye health in 2025 has become a major priority for families, early childhood professionals, and eye specialists.
From the very first months, a vision exam allows the measurement of visual acuity, assessment of accommodation, color vision, binocular vision, and early detection of visual problems still invisible to parents.
Children compensate extremely well, which delays diagnosis and complicates medical management.
This is why an early screening is essential to identify visual disorders, strabismus, hypermetropia, astigmatism, and other refractive disorders.
In the context of children’s eye health in 2025, screening at 9 months and again before age 3 is very important.
The Optikid report recalls that many visual defects are congenital or develop silently. Even a slight decrease in acuity may be linked to an anomaly of the eyeball, the lens, the retina, or the optic nerve.
Family history plays a crucial role: when a parent has a vision disorder, strabismus, or an eye disease, it is recommended to consult an ophthalmologist from an early age.
Ophthalmologists and orthoptists now have precise tools for early detection and screening: visual field measurement, eye alignment tests, fundoscopy, and structural analyses.
In certain ophthalmology centers, specialized consultations bring together several practitioners, offering a smoother care pathway, particularly in cases of suspected amblyopia, ocular disease, or rarer ophthalmic conditions.
When the specialist prescribes optical correction, it may take the form of corrective glasses, contact lenses (in specific cases of pediatric contactology), or orthoptic rehabilitation carried out by an orthoptist.
The goal: helping the child regain stable, comfortable, and lasting vision.
According to the Optikid report, the environment plays a major role in children’s eye health in 2025.
Prolonged screen exposure, lack of sleep, and limited natural light contribute to the development of myopia and visual disorders.
Spending more time outdoors, reducing prolonged near vision tasks, and monitoring signs of eye fatigue help reduce the risk of blurred vision.
When a child is referred to an ophthalmology center, the medical team offers personalized medical care.
This may include:
a specialized consultation ;
adapted optical correction ;
an orthoptic rehabilitation session ;
regular follow-ups to monitor progression ;
in rarer cases, medical and surgical intervention
Specialists emphasize that even a child who does not complain may present a vision disorder. Screening should therefore never be postponed.
Ensuring children’s eye health in 2025 means acting together: parents, pediatricians, orthoptists, ophthalmologists, opticians, and multidisciplinary teams.
Thanks to prevention, ophthalmology consultations, optical correction, and advances in pediatric ophthalmology, every child can benefit from reliable follow-up, early detection, and tailored support to regain stable vision and build their learning with confidence.