Contact lens wear not allowed downrange

  • Published
  • By Airman 1st Class Eydie Sakura
  • 52nd Fighter Wing Public Affairs
Blowing sand, smoke and fine dust particles are an eyeball’s worst nightmare. Now imagine holding up your unit because you have “something in your eye.”

This type of scenario is exactly what optometrists fear most when Airmen wear contact lenses instead of their glasses while working in a deployed environment.

As stated in U.S. Central Command guidance printed in January 2005, “Personnel who require medical equipment (i.e. corrective eyewear) must deploy with all required items in their possession, to include two pairs of eyeglasses, if needed, and protective mask eyeglass inserts.”

This guidance is a result from lessons learned from recent conflicts and joint missions.

“If the Army, Navy and Marines can’t deploy with contact lenses and must wear their glasses, then the Air Force should follow suit when deploying,” said Maj. Robert Kesead, 52nd Aerospace Medicine Squadron optometry flight commander. “As of right now, if Airmen want to wear their contacts while there [downrange], they have to get pre-approval from their unit deployment commander.”

Not only are contact lenses time consuming to take care of in a deployed location, but they have become an operational safety issue as well.

“It was discovered that 90 percent of ocular foreign bodies were preventable just by wearing glasses,” said Capt. Jeff Autrey, 52nd AMDS optometry clinical services chief. “Many man-hours were lost due to troops with non-battle injuries due to problems with contact lenses and having ‘something in your eye.’”

People heading downrange must contend with field conditions that may not allow for proper contact lens hygiene, and poor hygiene leads to an increase in eye abrasions, infections and ulcers.

“The ‘unclean’ environment and extended hours of continuous operations lead to people over-wearing the contacts,” Captain Autrey said. “Continuous wearing of lenses without removal may cause inflammation, infection and permanent loss of vision.”

Such side effects include sensitivity to light, tearing, burning and scratching. To reduce these symptoms, Airmen who normally wear contact lenses can wear their civilian or everyday prescription glasses while deployed, but must also have at least one pair of the brown plastic military-issued glasses.

“We make it mandatory for deploying Airmen to bring their military-issued glasses as well as their everyday glasses,” the captain said. “If both pair of glasses became non-operational, the brown plastic glasses are the only glasses that can be repaired downrange.”