U.S. counties with no pediatric ophthalmologist
Screening is not care completion
The system leaks between referral and treatment.
Orthoptists are the specialized handoff point that turns scarce physician time into measurement, treatment, monitoring, surgical planning, and follow-up.
American children living more than 60 minutes from pediatric ophthalmology care
Average pediatric ophthalmology and strabismus fellowship vacancy rate
Annual patient visits at the CHLA Vision Center
Modeled lifetime risk of bilateral visual impairment with vs without amblyopia
Every number links to its population, year, source, and evidence strength.
Orthoptic care
Explore how orthoptists measure, monitor, and guide binocular vision care
Select a clinical focus area to see what orthoptists measure, why those findings matter, and where that work connects to the patient care pathway.
Clinical focus areas
Choose a condition area to update the measurement panel and care pathway.
Active focus
Strabismus
Assessment of eye alignment and coordination.
What orthoptists measure
Orthoptists measure ocular alignment, motility, fixation behavior, and binocular control.
Why it matters clinically
Precise measurements help determine whether management should involve monitoring, lenses, exercises, prisms, or surgical planning.
How it connects to care decisions
Findings connect measurement to treatment plans, surgical planning, and postoperative comparison.
The need
Common enough to be a population problem
Low percentages become large caseloads when applied to more than 70 million U.S. children. Older studies remain useful, but the page labels their periods visibly.
Diplopia-related ambulatory and emergency visits, based on 2003-2012 nationally representative visit data.
Prevalence ranges
Older population-based studies are labeled by period and kept distinct from affected-person estimates.
The care gap
The system leaks before treatment can work
Access loss appears before specialty care, inside referral completion, and during treatment adherence. Mixed-source stages are separated rather than forced into one national cohort.
County access waffle
2,834 of 3,142 counties had no pediatric ophthalmologist in the April 2023 directory snapshot.
counties without a pediatric ophthalmologist.
1 in 7 children lives outside a 60-minute pediatric ophthalmology service area.
County presence and drive-time access are different measures. Both point to geographic access pressure.
School-age nationally representative pathway
Screened
Referred
Seen
Net throughput
Preschool bottlenecks from separate studies
Screened at age 3
Follow-up after failed screen
Patching adherence often below
Low-confidence
These percentages come from different populations and should not be interpreted as one longitudinal cohort.
Los Angeles
Los Angeles makes the national problem concrete
The local burden is measured in thousands, while the ability to reach specialist care varies sharply by neighborhood, coverage, and age.
Children under 18 in Los Angeles County
Modeled LA County preschool children with strabismus
Modeled LA County preschool children with amblyopia
LA County children covered by Medi-Cal
Uninsured children in LA County
Modeled LA preschool burden
Ranges use local MEPEDS prevalence applied to current population estimates.
CHLA + USC flagship response
What concentrated capacity looks like
Regional burden
CHLA Vision Center
Orthoptists + pediatric ophthalmologists + subspecialists
Diagnosis, treatment, surgery, follow-up, training, research
Annual patient visits at the CHLA Vision Center
Ophthalmic surgeries annually at the CHLA Vision Center
Caveat: CHLA program data demonstrate scale and breadth. They do not, by themselves, prove that the center causes superior population-level outcomes.
Metro ecosystem comparison
A center is more than a building
This matrix shows public documentation signals, not a simplistic ranking. Publicly documented means visible in the reviewed public sources.
| Metro | Eye division | Volume | Orthoptists | Orthoptic training | PO fellowship | Regional sites | Subspecialty breadth | Public note |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Los Angeles / CHLA | Nearly 17,000 visits and more than 1,400 surgeries annually. | |||||||
| Boston / Boston Children's | - | Publicly documented pediatric ophthalmology and orthoptic training infrastructure. | ||||||
| Philadelphia / CHOP | - | Publicly listed multidisciplinary team including orthoptists. | ||||||
| Houston / Texas Children's | More than 16,000 patients and more than 1,100 procedures annually. | |||||||
| Cincinnati / Cincinnati Children's | More than 22,000 patients annually. | |||||||
| San Antonio | - | - | - | - | One reviewed private practice listed 2 pediatric ophthalmologists and 2 orthoptists. | |||
| El Paso | - | - | - | - | - | Lower-depth public profile in reviewed sources. | ||
| Las Vegas | - | - | - | - | - | Lower-depth public profile in reviewed sources. |
Orthoptists per 100,000 total population
True zero baseline. U.S., UK, and Australia use different counting frames.
Other systems built a profession. The U.S. built a workaround.
UK / Australia
Recognized profession -> formal registration or national professional framework -> visible service roles -> countable workforce -> clearer training destination -> broader deployment.
United States
Certification without state licensure -> no independent national billing identity -> work bundled under ophthalmology -> labor absorbed into technician or residual categories -> weak national workforce data.
Training-site count is not equivalent to annual graduates or workforce output. U.S. program counts are shown with a discrepancy note.
Pediatric ophthalmology workforce
The physician workforce orthoptists extend is already strained
The supply literature describes different universes: directory snapshots, active surgical estimates, fellowship vacancies, wait times, payer pressure, and retirement exposure.
Directory-identified pediatric ophthalmologists
Narrower estimate of active surgical pediatric ophthalmology workforce
Average pediatric ophthalmology and strabismus fellowship vacancy rate
Median years in practice among pediatric ophthalmologists
Fellowship U.S.-graduate share
A measured decline from 72% to 47% across the cited fellowship cycles.
Wait-time pressure
Aligned month bars from surveyed academic eye centers and children's hospitals.
Human stakes
The cost of delay is lived, not abstract
The evidence should stay careful: associations are associations, modeled risk is modeled risk, and treatment gains vary. The practical point is that access, adherence, and follow-up shape how much function can be preserved or restored.
Lifetime vision
Amblyopia is not only a childhood acuity issue; long-horizon evidence links it to higher lifetime risk if the better eye is later damaged.
Mental health and social experience
Recent adult strabismus data show higher anxiety and depression associations, but the page avoids causal language.
Treatment can work
The evidence does not say every condition is fully reversible. It says care completion and follow-up materially affect function.
The leverage already exists.
The United States does not need orthoptists to replace pediatric ophthalmologists. It needs them to make scarce pediatric and strabismus expertise go further through measurement, triage, treatment, monitoring, surgical planning, and follow-up.
Sources and methods
The evidence stays visible
Every displayed number is backed by a centralized evidence record with source title, named study paper, period, population, caveat, confidence label, and publication-verification state.
Study papers
Named source documents behind the evidence layer
The original working filenames were replaced with publication-style titles. These markdown papers remain local source documents; public source URLs are only added when the exact URL is preserved and verified.
Website-Ready Synthesis on Orthoptics and Pediatric Eye Care
Reconciled baseline, hero statistics, section statistics, and denominator conflict notes for the public site.
Open markdownUntreated Amblyopia, Strabismus, Diplopia, and Binocular Vision Disorders
Human-stakes evidence covering amblyopia, strabismus, diplopia, binocular function, treatment response, and outcome limits.
Open markdownU.S. Pediatric Ophthalmology Workforce Strain and the Geographic Access Cliff
National pediatric ophthalmology supply, fellowship pipeline, geography, wait times, payer pressure, and orthoptic leverage.
Open markdownWhy Orthoptics Is Heavily Deployed in the UK and Australia but Lightly Deployed in the United States
Cross-country workforce, training, regulation, billing, and service-design comparison.
Open markdownPediatric Eye Care Access With and Without a CHLA-Class Center
Metro and regional comparison framing for pediatric eye-care access with and without a flagship center.
Open markdownOrthoptics in the United States: Handoff Summary
Condensed argument chain, key numbers, national burden, treatment funnel, and workforce takeaways.
Open markdownUnited States Orthoptics Burden and Treatment Funnel
Population burden, screening and referral funnels, disparities, access barriers, and treatment-completion evidence.
Open markdownLos Angeles County Pediatric Eye Care and the CHLA-USC Orthoptics-Ophthalmology Hub
Los Angeles County burden, insurance context, CHLA Vision Center throughput, USC affiliation, and counterfactual access framing.
Open markdownOrthoptics in the United States
Profession profile covering training, scope, workforce constraints, international benchmark, and data gaps.
Open markdownShowing 42 of 42 evidence records. Study papers use publication-style names and link to the supporting markdown files. Raw source URLs are not included where the supplied markdown did not preserve them.
Method notes
These notes are part of the page, not buried in a footer. They explain the main places where the public evidence can mislead if compressed too hard.
Measured vs modeled
Measured values come directly from a cited survey, registry, directory snapshot, or program material. Modeled values apply measured rates to a population or use a formal model. Estimates are defensible approximations. Low-confidence values are useful but limited by old, thin, or hard-to-audit evidence.
Mixed-source funnels
The school-age pathway and preschool bottlenecks come from different populations. The page keeps them visually separated and uses dotted connectors where a mixed-source relationship is explanatory rather than longitudinal.
Directory counts vs active practice
The 1,060 pediatric ophthalmologist count is a directory snapshot. The 800-900 active surgical estimate is a narrower practice-definition estimate. They are not averaged.
Cross-country denominators
The U.S., UK, and Australia use different professional and regulatory counting frames. Total-population per-100,000 comparisons are the main display, with denominator warnings visible.
Orthoptics vs optometry
Orthoptists are not optometrists. Where pediatric optometry appears in access research, this page labels it as a shared pediatric eye-care metric rather than orthoptics-specific evidence.
Source URLs
The supplied markdown preserved source titles and citation handles, but not raw source URLs. The app does not invent URLs; affected evidence drawers mark the URL as not included in the supplied markdown.