Avoid using everyday frame during your game

Sports Frame instead of Everyday Frame

What’s good for the classroom is not always right for the gym or field.

  • Source: American Optometric Association
  • Every 13 minutes an emergency room in the United States treats a sports related eye injury
  • Approximately 600,000 documented sports-related injuries are reported each year in the United States
  • More than 42,000 sports-related eye injuries require emergency room attention
  • An estimated 13,500 cases result in permanent loss of sight
  • Approximately 72% of sports-related eye injuries occur in people younger than 25 years and approximately
  • 43% occur in children younger than 15 years
  • Source: American Optometric Association, Majority of Sports-Related Eye Injuries are Preventable with Protective Eyewear, April 1, 2008

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WARNING: This report contains graphic footage of an eye injury. Viewer discretion is advised. 

Akil Mitchell Suffers Sickening Eye Injury During Breakers Basketball Game (GRAPHIC VIDEO)

‘It’s certainly the most graphic thing I’ve ever seen on a basketball court.’

27/01/2017 10:49 | Updated 27 January 2017

AUCKLAND, NEW ZEALAND – JANUARY 26: Akil Mitchell of the Breakers acknowledges the supporters as he is helped off the court by his team with a serious eye injury during the round 17 NBL match between the New Zealand Breakers and the Cairns Taipans at the North Shore Events Centre on January 26, 2017 in Auckland, New Zealand. (Photo by Anthony Au-Yeung/Getty Images)

A New Zealand basketball player is expected to make a full recovery after his eyeball popped out of its socket in a scuffle during a game.

Breakers forward Akil Mitchell collapsed after the finger of an opposing player poked his eye and dislodged it.

Players from both teams recoiled in horror when the extend of Mitchell’s injury was revealed, before helping him off the court in Auckland on Thursday night.

Medics rushed to Mitchell’s aid and were able to slide the eyeball back in.

The 24-year-old told New Zealand’s Radio Sport: “I could still see out of the eye.

“I remember thinking oh man… this is kinda bad, but I actually felt it kind of out of place and that’s when I kind of freaked out a little bit.

“Once I got in the ambulance they gave me a little pain medicine and some saline drops in my eye and I felt it slide back into place, which is also a really strange feeling.”

Despite his initial fears he would lose his sight, Mitchell is expected to make a full recovery and return to the court soon.

Mitchell has tweeted his thanks and shown his sense of humour about the incident, using a googly-eyes emoji before joking: “too soon?”

Breakers General Manager Dillon Boucher told NZ Stuff: “It’s a miracle, I reckon.

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Source: Gear Up! Sports-Related Eye Injuries: What You Need to Know and Tips for Prevention, National Eye Institute, National Institutes of Health

 

Gear Up! Sports-Related Eye Injuries

 

 

 

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