An eye for the right touch
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Paul Clinton
Young Kelley Engel bopped around in an exam chair, cooing about
the “magic” glasses and smiling as a doctor, Beth Ballinger, shined
her retinoscope at the girl for a routine eye exam.
It was the 3-year-old’s first eye exam, a surprisingly playful and
relaxed process that culminated in the sparkly gift of a faux ruby
and diamond ring.
Ballinger, who has run an optometrist practice out of her Dover
Street office for more than 20 years, makes eye exams fun. This isn’t
a coldly sterile experience that children grow to dread.
“The kids are not inhibited one bit,” Kelley’s mother, Jennifer,
said. “They’re having fun.”
Ballinger has a deeper reason for using the fun frog glasses,
colorful visual-recognition blocks and a furry play mouse that pipes
disco-classic “Kung-Fu Fighting” as it twirls a tiny noon-chuck.
She specializes in treating children with severe disabilities, who
become easily frightened by a doctor’s tools and any kind of poking
or prodding.
Many of the disabled children quickly open up, when Ballinger
pulls out a colorful toy or instrument carefully disguised by a fun
animal.
Ballinger, who lives in Corona del Mar, treats many children who
can’t afford to pay for the treatment. She says she has never turned
a child away.
One young girl Ballinger treated had eaten hamburger meat
contaminated by E. coli bacteria and was confined to a wheelchair.
The 8-year-old was a paraplegic and breathing from an apparatus.
After several sessions, the girl could communicate by moving her
eyes and breathe on her own for nine-hour intervals.
Ballinger isn’t a miracle healer. However, she trains the children
to use visual skills to improve their daily lives.
“You have to look beyond the disability,” Ballinger said. “You
have to see that essential human soul that’s inside them.”
And often Ballinger finds a fairly simple solution to a child’s
problems in school reading, writing or paying attention to lessons.
In the case of one girl, whose vision blurred when she looked to
the left, it was as simple as moving her to the left-hand side of the
classroom. She had been diagnosed with Dwayne’s syndrome.
Ballinger’s solution helped the girl listen to the lessons without
needing to crane her neck.
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