Low-dose atropine eye drops are one of the most effective treatments for slowing myopia progression in children.
Atropine Eye Drops for Myopia: What Every Parent Needs to Know
Atropine Eye Drops for Myopia: What Every Parent Needs to Know
If your child's eye doctor has mentioned low-dose atropine for myopia control, you probably have a lot of questions. What is it? Does it work? Where do you get it? This post answers all of that — and explains why a compounding pharmacy like Kearney Park is often the only place to fill these prescriptions.
What Is Myopia and Why Is It Getting Worse?
Myopia (nearsightedness) affects more than 40% of Americans and is rapidly increasing — particularly in children. Beyond glasses and contacts, myopia progression is a genuine health concern. High myopia is associated with a significantly increased risk of retinal detachment, glaucoma, and vision loss later in life.
The goal of myopia management is not just clear vision today — it is slowing the progression so your child's prescription stabilizes at a safer level.
What Is Low-Dose Atropine?
Atropine is a medication that has been used in ophthalmology for over 100 years. At high concentrations (1%), it dilates the pupil and temporarily paralyzes the focusing muscle of the eye. At very low concentrations — 0.01%, 0.025%, and 0.05% — it slows the elongation of the eyeball that causes myopia to progress.
Multiple large-scale clinical studies, including the landmark ATOM2 trial, have shown that low-dose atropine can reduce myopia progression by 50-60% with minimal side effects at the 0.01% concentration.
The American Academy of Ophthalmology now recognizes low-dose atropine as a frontline option for myopia management in children.
Why Can't I Just Get This at a Regular Pharmacy?
Here is the important part that most parents don't realize: low-dose atropine eye drops at concentrations like 0.01% are not commercially available. There is no FDA-approved product at this concentration. The only way to get it is through a compounding pharmacy — one that can prepare sterile ophthalmic formulations.
That is exactly what Kearney Park Compounding Pharmacy does.
What Concentrations Do We Compound?
We compound atropine sulfate ophthalmic drops at:
• 0.01% — the most commonly prescribed concentration for myopia control
• 0.025% — intermediate concentration for faster progressing cases
• 0.05% — higher concentration per clinical protocol
• Any custom concentration your ophthalmologist or optometrist prescribes
• Preservative-free formulations available on request
All preparations are sterile, compounded under USP 797 standards in our cleanroom facility, and shipped statewide throughout Texas with temperature-controlled packaging.
How to Get a Prescription Filled
The process is simple for both prescribers and patients:
For physicians and optometrists: fax your prescription to (972) 329-1436. We contact the patient directly, confirm payment, and handle shipping — your staff does not have to manage the process.
For patients: ask your eye doctor to prescribe low-dose atropine and direct the prescription to Kearney Park Compounding Pharmacy. We can ship directly to your home anywhere in Texas.
Questions About Atropine for Your Child's Myopia?
Call us directly at (972) 329-1168. Our pharmacist-owner Dr. Fronce Barnes is available for clinical consultation with prescribers and patient questions. No call centers. No runaround.
Kearney Park Compounding Pharmacy
3224 Gus Thomason Rd, Mesquite, TX 75150
Phone: (972) 329-1168 | Fax: (972) 329-1436 | kpprx.org
Disclaimer: This post is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Speak with your eye care provider to determine if atropine therapy is appropriate for your child.







