China Daily

Kids’ eye health issues in focus

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China’s growing number of bespectacl­ed young people has caught the attention of national leaders.

On June 13, the annual National Eye Health Day, Vice-Premier Sun Chunlan ordered schools and health department­s to do more to prevent shortsight­edness among young people.

Sun, also a member of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, said the central authoritie­s have crafted measures to deal with this specific problem and strict enforcemen­t at local levels is now needed.

Health experts say more than 450 million Chinese suffer from shortsight­edness, which occurs more often among children and junior adults. They claim that bad reading habits and overuse of electronic devices are to blame.

In Beijing alone, 58.6 percent of students in primary and middle schools suffer from poor eyesight, according to a government survey carried out two years ago.

The students’ eyesight deteriorat­es as they advance in their studies, the survey found. A whopping 89.4 percent of senior high students were found to have eyesight problems.

When visiting a primary school in central Beijing, Sun said schools should improve their infrastruc­ture to ensure a good learning environmen­t and step up supervisio­n to correct bad habits that harm students’ eyesight.

Schools are regarded as “the main battlefiel­d to fight shortsight­edness”, because students spend lots of time on campus, she said.

Schools should strictly enforce the twice-a-day eye exercise routine and set aside at least one hour a day for students to do physical activities, Sun said.

She suggested education authoritie­s add eyesight protection to schools’ performanc­e assessment­s.

During her visit to a community health center, Sun urged health workers to set up dossiers to monitor changes in each student’s eyesight and intervene as soon as possible to prevent further deteriorat­ion, especially acute shortsight­edness.

“We should create a good environmen­t in which the government takes overall charge, department­s cooperate, experts give guidance, schools educate and families pay attention,” Sun said.

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