Hello School Nurses

You have been sent to this page because someone told you that you should offer color testing to your students.

Well, whoever sent you here is right!

Why should schools offer color deficiency screening?

parents with two boys reading
Colors are some of the earlier words they tend to learn and a means they can use for learning
grey and purple heart dot color test
Color carries critical importance in the development of children’s cognitive skills.
One in twelve boys and about one in two hundred girls will have a color vision deficit.

Why Should a School Nurse offer color vision screening?

  • About 8% of boys have a color deficiency.
  • Students who complete a color deficiency screening will be referred to an optometrist or ophthalmologist sooner than they would have been previously.
  • Most five and six year olds have not had a recent eye exam.

Here are the benefits for you:

  • Color deficiency screening can be completed at home!
  • You can help your students avoid unnecessary eye issues that quite possibly would have gone unnoticed.
  • The SolutionsInLowVision online color test automatically sends the results of any color test taken to your email (if you choose)

Solutions in Low Vision’s program leads to an increase in the percentage of children who are accurately referred for an eye exam by over 50%.

Because school nurses tend to be pulled in so many directions, we recommend using an online color deficiency screening tool that will accurately predict which children might have difficulties recognizing certain colors, but can be conducted at home with the child’s parent or guardian.

One in twelve boys and about one in two hundred girls will have a color vision deficit.

Color deficiency screening:

Some school nurses screen for color deficiency in school-age children, yet it is required in only eleven states.1

Experts have stated that “Color carries critical importance in the development of children’s cognitive skills.” In fact “Colors are some of the earlier words they tend to learn and a means they can use for learning.” (Psychology Today, Meng 2022)2

Because school nurses tend to be pulled in so many directions, we recommend using an online color deficiency screening tool that will accurately predict which children might have difficulties recognizing certain colors, but can be conducted at home with the child’s parent or guardian.

One in twelve boys and about one in two hundred girls will have a color vision deficit.

Vision screening support:

Forty states require vision screening, many of which specifically require acuity testing. We recommend using a pediatric photoscreener that can not only provide accurate acuity measurement but will also help identify even more children who need to be seen by an eye professional. Studies show that photoscreeners can improve detection of risk factors in children by 80%.3

Reading intervention support:

Once a screening has been completed using a photoscreener, additional information may be found that could potentially identify children who might struggle with reading. Some children have challenges when attempting to decipher certain letters (typically b and d or others that have a “mirror image”). They often develop dyslexia and require reading intervention. Our team teaches strategies using photoscreening results that might help identify these children earlier than traditional methods.



And we’re currently building out a bunch of features within SolutionsInLowVision that go way beyond color testing, including:

 – Continued support for your staff to provide services to patients identified with an age-onset form of blindness.
 – On-line resources for staff to reference as they begin to work with patients with low vision.
 – Support for your billing department to help build revenue in your practice (when needed and applicable).

In the future, access to these additional services will cost $249/month.

We’re so confident that you’re going to really enjoy having this as an offering for your patients that you can join today and try us out for free for the first 30 days, no strings attached.

We’ll show you how to earn  additional income from low vision services while improving outcomes.

If you are ever unsatisfied, just email us and cancel.  No hard feelings.

So don’t wait.
Join today!

$49/month plus a 1 month free trial

Currently Free!

1. Pediatric and School-Age Vision Screening in the United States: Rationale, Components, and Future Directions – PMC (nih.gov)

2. “The Importance of Colors for Child Development”, Color Matters and Development, Psychology Today, Meng 2022.

3. Comparison of photoscreening to chart methodology for vision screening, Oregon Health& Science University, Vaughn, Dale, Hererra, 2019.