Community Corner

Abington Business Sends Eye Shields to U.S. Soldiers

Tom Cockley, president of the Elkins Park-based Gulden Ophthalmics, donated 500 Eye Shields when he learned that the troops did not have them.

Tom Cockley’s family has been a leader in the ophthalmic instruments and devices industry since 1938. Cockley’s grandfather started Gulden Ophthalmics, located at 225 Caldwalader Ave. in Elkins Park, of which Cockley is the company’s president.

“We work with the movers and shakers of the optometrists and ophthalmologists,” Cockley said.

According to Cockely, in January of this year, one of his clients had forwarded him an article published in MilitaryTimes.com, in which he read that Eye Shields can be found in the first aid kits of all U.S. sailors, Marines, and airmen. Cockley describes the Eye Shields as pear-shaped, single protective eyepiece made of unbreakable polycarbonate.

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However, he read on that U.S. Army soldiers do not have eye shield devices in their first aid kits. According to the MilitaryTimes.com article, eye injuries have accounted for 15-percent of battlefield traumas. Since 2001, eye injuries to U.S. troops have resulted in 197,000 visits to doctors and 4,000 hospitalizations.

A recent press release about Cockley’s discovery stated that pressure patches were being used in lieu of the Eye Shields. The release quotes Dr. Mary Lawrence, the Vision Center of Excellence deputy director, speaking to the Department of Defense earlier this year, as saying, “A pressure patch on an eye is devastating. A pressure patch can turn an eye that is salvageable in to one that is not salvageable, and will end up in a bucket in an operating room.”

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“We’ve been making Eye Shields since the 1950s,” Cockely said of Gulden Ophthalmics. “When I read the article, I thought this should not be happening,”

Cockley has had family serve in the military, and he said his company has been contacted by the military for various contracts. So, he said he was surprised to find that he could not directly donate Eye Shields to the government.

“This was the first time we pursued them, so to speak,” Cockely said.

Through his personal research, Cockely came into contact with Troops Direct, an organization that supports troops of larger unit levels serving in the front lines by functioning as a “back line” of supply for units serving in Afghanistan Africa, at sea and other troops in “hot-spot” areas.

By March 20, Cockely, working with Troop Direct, was able to send to soldiers in Afghanistan 500 Eye Shields.

For more information on Eye Shields and other ophthalmic devices, visit Gulden’s website or contact Gulden Ophthalmics at 215-884-8105 or visit www.guldenophthalmics.com  or the Troops Direct Facebook page.


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