How to Read Contact Lens Power
- 1). On the contact lens box, read the prescription information from left to right. The prescription should unfold in the following way: Eye, Power (sphere), BC, Dia and Brand. The Eye column will contain either OD, OS or OU, which mean right eye, left eye or both eyes, respectively. This tells you what eye the prescription is for.
- 2). Read the next column, which will be the power of the contact for that eye. Power is measured from 20.00 to +20.00 (in dioptres), and this equates to the amount of compensation needed in the eye. It basically reflects the extent of the nearsightedness/myopic (a negative number) or farsightedness/hyperopic (a positive number).
- 3). Read the following chart to understand what your power or sphere means (obtained from mdsupport.org):
Snellen----Estimated Prescription
20/10____Plano (zero/0)
20/15____Plano
20/20____Plano to -0.25
20/30____-0.50
20/40____-0.75
20/50____-1.00 to -1.25
20/100___-1.75 to -2.00
20/200___-2.00 to -2.50
These are the most commonly used powers. If your power was in the positives (meaning you are farsighted), then the snellen chart ratio would grow larger as opposed to smaller. - 4). Learn what the Snellen chart means. When having an eye test, one eye is covered at a time, and the vision is recorded. In the Snellen ratio of 20/20 (what we've categorized as normal eyesight), the first 20 is the distance of the test-20 feet. The second 20 is the distance a normal eye can see at the test-20 feet. Thus, 20/20 is "normal" eyesight. If, for instance, your ratio is 20/40, then your eye sees the test at 20 feet, where a normal eye could see it at 40 feet, and so on down the list. Therefore, the power of your contact lens essentially tells you the compensation needed for your eyes so that they can see at 20/20.
Reading the contact lens power
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