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Mobile
screening unit tests Sisters children
Sisters children
got their vision and hearing checked last week during the first visit of
the Oregon Lions Mobile Screening Unit on Friday, September 27.
Screeners offered free hearing
and eye tests for all first and second grade students at the Sisters Elementary
school.
"We are testing for visual
acuity, and we also test the children on how well they see up close,"
Dick LeFrancis, MSU facilitator, explained.
"The school district wanted
us to test the first and second graders to get them while they're young.
But the smaller they are, the longer the testing can take."
LeFrancis supervises the volunteers
who give the tests and drives the screening unit.
The mobile screening unit
is a 44-foot converted fifth-wheel trailer.
It has two rooms -- one for
visual screening (complete with eye charts).
The second is equipped with
five audiometers to test for hearing.
"We provide the screening
free of charge," LeFrancis said. "The school then does the follow-up with
the parents.
"We also do public screenings
for adults. In addition to screening for vision and hearing, we can test
for diabetes, blood pressure, and glaucoma."
As the name implies, the Mobile
Screening Unit is sponsored by the Oregon Lions Club, a community service
organization.
Larry Simonson, the president
of the newly-formed Three Sisters Lions Club, was on hand to help with
the screening.
"The Lions Club in Sisters
just got its charter on June 1," he said.
"The Lions are all about community
service, and the Mobile Screening Unit is just one project that we have."
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