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08-14-2017 09:05 PM
Michael Schecter
August 11 at 8:33pm ·
As an Optometrist , I want to express concern that I have about the solar eclipse on Monday, Aug 21. There are serious risks associated with viewing a solar eclipse directly, even with the use of solar filter glasses. Everyone should keep in mind if they or their children are considering this.
We have to keep in mind that some people will encounter the inability to control every aspect of this exercise. For instance, true solar eclipse glasses are made for adults, do not fit children well and should not be used without direct parental supervision. If the solar glasses do not filter out 100% of the harmful UV rays, if they are not used absolutely perfectly, or should there be a manufacturing defect in any of them, this will result in permanent and irreversible vision loss for any eye exposed. Just like sunburn to the skin, the effects are not felt or noticed immediately. I have a great fear that I will have patients in my office on Tuesday, Aug 22 who woke up with hazy, blurry vision that I cannot fix. It is a huge risk to watch the eclipse even with the use of solar glasses. There is no absolutely safe way to do so other than on TV.
The biggest danger with children is ensuring proper use without direct parental supervision. As the eclipse passes over many places, including Columbus, the moon will not block 100% of the sun. Because so much of its light is blocked by the moon, if one looks at it without full protection, it does not cause pain as looking at the sun does on a regular day. Normally if you try to look at the sun, it physically hurts and you can't see anything. During an eclipse, however, it is easier to stare for a bit....and even less than 30 seconds of exposure to a partially eclipsed sun, you can burn a blind spot right to your most precious central vision. With solar glasses you can't see ANYTHING except the crescent of light of the sun. Kids could have a tendency to want to peak around the filter to see what is actually going on up there. One failure, just one, where education and supervision fail, will have such a devastating consequence.
Please, please be safe. Watch it on television.
PS Feel free to share this post.
08-14-2017 09:14 PM
@SeaMaiden Thank you for this informative post. They have been warning us on our local newscasts but I fear some people will ignore the warnings and suffer the consequences. Your post really covered the danger.
08-14-2017 09:14 PM
@SeaMaiden ~ Thank you for sharing. I plan on watching exactly as he stressed ~ on TV! :-)
08-14-2017 09:24 PM
Thank you Michael for this very valuable information!!
08-14-2017 09:26 PM
Thank you, SeaMaiden. I appreciate learning this.
08-14-2017 10:13 PM
Thank you for this. I think I'll make a pinhole viewer instead of wearing the glasses. Hope it works and I'm not embarrassed.
08-14-2017 10:28 PM
You can do something as simple as putting a pinhole in a piece of paper, aim that toward the sun while you look down at the cement. You'll see the cresent cut-out shadow on the ground.
Last time there was a decent eclipse I could even see the muliple shadows on the ground; I think they were being filtered through leaves on a tree.
Pretty cool and no damage to the eyes!
08-14-2017 11:27 PM
I, along with millions of other people in this country, will be watching the eclipse using the recommended viewing advice.
if you don't ever again see me posting here after the 21st, it will be because I've lost my vision.
08-15-2017 07:10 AM
as a kid you were told not to look at sun during an eclipse, it's not new. Of course now people need to be told everything 10K times
I don't care about it much,
08-15-2017 07:14 AM
We're using welding goggles with an extra dark plate.
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