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Testing Your Vision

What 20/20 Vision Means

That familiar chart topped by the large letter "E" is an important measure of your visual acuity, or sharpness of vision. If your doctor says your visual acuity is 20/20, you see at 20 feet what a person without vision problems sees at 20 feet. This measurement is traditionally considered the baseline, and any differential from it is used by your doctor to evaluate your vision. Accordingly, if you have 20/40 vision, you see at 20 feet what a person with 20/20 vision would see at 40 feet. And if you're one of the lucky few (someone with 20/15 vision, for example), you can see at 20 feet what others would have to be at 15 feet to see. This test shows how well you can distinguish the shape of an object.

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Beyond 20/20 Vision: Interpreting Your Prescription

When doctors use the phrase “20/20 vision,” they’re measuring visual acuity. But doctors use a different notation when measuring the actual prescription of the eye. To determine your prescription, doctors measure the degree to which your eye is out of focus – the number reflects the power required from your glasses or contact lenses to get your eyes into focus (measured in diopters). If you don't need glasses, your eyes are not out of focus, and your prescription to get in focus is, naturally, zero (0). The more out of focus your eye is, the higher your prescription.

Your prescription consists of three numbers, specific for each eye. Let's use a typical prescription as an example:

-5.00 -1.50 x 180

  • The first number indicates the power of the lens required to correct your near- or farsightedness. If this number is negative, you are nearsighted, or short sighted. A positive number indicates that you are farsighted, or long sighted. The larger the number, the more severe your nearsightedness or farsightedness.
  • The second number is a measure of the astigmatism in your eye. This may be measured in a positive or negative form, so the number may have a plus or minus sign in front of it.
  • Astigmatism also has a direction to it. The third number in the prescription, ranging from 0 to 180, represents the axis or direction of your astigmatism, in degrees.

So, in the example above, you do not have 20/20 vision. Instead, you are nearsighted, with a moderate degree of astigmatism.

Glossary Entries

visual acuity: Another phrase for visual clarity, a measure of the eye`s ability to distinguish the shape of objects. Visual acuity is measured with a traditional eye chart, with the goal traditionally being 20/20.

diopters: A unit of measurement for myopia, hyperopia and astigmatism that usually falls within a scale of +14 to -14. A positive number indicates hyperopia and a negative number indicates myopia. Positive and negative numbers are also used to indicate astigmatism. Whether the number is positive or negative, the higher the number the greater the extent of the vision problem.