Calgary Herald

VISION QUEST

China blames video games for poor eyesight

- BEN GUARINO

A blight of bad eyesight plagues urban centres in China and other East Asian countries. In Hong Kong and Singapore, the rate of myopia, or nearsighte­dness, is as high as 90 per cent in young adults. Though things aren’t as blurry in the United States — about a third of the population has trouble seeing distant objects — rates have doubled since the 1970s. If current trends continue, half of the world could be myopic by 2050.

China blames video games for the eyeglass epidemic and recently took them to task. The state-run Xinhua News Agency wrote that the “vision health of our country ’s young people has always been of great concern” to Xi Jinping, the Communist party general secretary and China’s president. Chinese media distributo­rs, The New York Times reported, will limit the number of new games approved for sale.

By singling out video games, China has taken a somewhat “extreme stance,” according to Aaron M. Miller, a pediatric ophthalmol­ogist and a clinical spokesman for the American Academy of Ophthalmol­ogy. “There’s not a direct correlatio­n or a clear relationsh­ip between video games, screen time and nearsighte­dness developmen­t.”

The scientific literature can offer only a fuzzy picture of myopia’s causes. Diet and genes influence myopia; myopic parents are more likely to have myopic children. Behaviours can play a role, too. Some ophthalmol­ogists look to activities lumped together under a term called “near-work” — any prolonged focus on a nearby object, as when reading, checking phones, studying and, yes, watching screens. Researcher­s have observed higher rates of myopia in college students, post-literate societies and, in one study, people who frequently use microscope­s.

There appears to be “a loose associatio­n” with near-work activities and nearsighte­dness, Miller said, though doctors do not fully understand the mechanism.

A recent and “very good study,” according to Miller, tracked myopia in nearly 2,000 children, between ages seven and 12, for four years in Taiwan. Most myopia studies focus on children around ages four to 12, when eyes grow and change shape.

In 2009, a quarter of the children had myopia, per the report, published this summer in the journal Ophthalmol­ogy. By 2013, an additional 28 per cent of the students in the study developed it. Taiwanese children who attended “cram schools” — for-profit courses where students learn English or other topics — had above-average risk for myopia.

“We’re not sure if it’s the nearwork that’s driving” these increased rates, Miller said, “or what’s not happening because those individual­s are doing nearwork.”

Reductions in the amount of natural sunlight exposure seem to correlate with nearsighte­dness. Put another way, the nature of the near-work — whether children are doing homework or reading or playing Fortnite — might matter less than the fact that they are not outside. In another recent study of schoolchil­dren, this time 10,000 kids in Delhi, India, those who spent more than 14 hours outdoors a week developed myopia at lowerthan-average rates.

Legions of kids who need glasses or vision correction add up: myopia costs the US$16 billion each year. And the ramificati­ons of this myopia boom can be even more serious. As nearsighte­dness worsens, the risk of diseases like glaucoma go up.

Nearsighte­d eyes can physically change, Miller said, elongating from orbs into olive-shapes. When this happens, the retina, the eye’s lining, gets thinner. Little tears form in retinas stretched too thin. Miller likened the tears to “wallpaper starting to peel off a wall.” In the worse case, the result is retinal detachment and blindness.

The American Academy of Ophthalmol­ogists recommends that people rest their eyes every so often by gazing at something other than screens. It has a 20-20-20 rule: every 20 minutes look at a thing 20 feet away for 20 seconds. Gaze out a window after beating a video game level or finishing a few book chapters. Alternate between an e-reader and an old-fashioned book. Don’t forget to blink.

Or, if you really want to give your eyes a treat — get off your phone, shut down your laptop, go outside and watch the birds.

 ?? JUNGHO CHOI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? China is curbing the sale of video games in response to an epidemic of myopia, but experts say evidence doesn’t support the video-game connection.
JUNGHO CHOI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS China is curbing the sale of video games in response to an epidemic of myopia, but experts say evidence doesn’t support the video-game connection.

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