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Don't Lose Sight of Diabetic Eye Disease

Approximately 10.5 million people with diagnosed diabetes have some form of diabetic eye disease. In fact, if you have diabetes, you're at increased risk for blindness. So, at least once a year, get a dilated eye examination in which drops are used to enlarge your pupils. This allows your eye care professional to see more of the inside of your eye to check for diabetic eye disease.

To learn more about diabetic eye disease, call Illinois Society for the Prevention of Blindness

If you or someone you know has diabetes

Each year, as many as 24,000 Americans with diabetes lose their sight from diabetic retinopathy, the most common form of diabetic eye disease. Yet blindness can be prevented through early detection and timely treatment. People with diabetes need to have a dilated eye examination at least once a year. This allows the eye care professional to see more of the inside of the eye to check for diabetic retinopathy and other types of diabetic eye disease, such as glaucoma and cataract.

For more information about diabetes and diabetic eye disease, call:
Illinois Society for the Prevention of Blindness

Illinois Society for the Prevention of Blindness - founded 1916

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