The Guardian Australia

Children urged to play outdoors to cut risk of shortsight­edness

- Nicola Davis

Children should be encouraged to spend time outdoors to reduce their risk of becoming shortsight­ed, experts have said.

Shortsight­edness is rising around the world, with the condition said to have reached epidemic proportion­s in east Asia: estimates suggest about 90% of teenagers and young adults in China have the condition.

While genetics are thought to play a large role in who ends up shortsight­ed – a condition that is down to having an overly long eyeball – research also suggests environmen­tal factors are important.

Several studies have found children who spend more time outdoors have a lower risk of myopia. While some report that looking into the distance could be important, others say exposure to outdoor light is key.

Experts say they have found new factors, and confirmed others, which could affect a child’s risk of becoming shortsight­ed. These include playing computer games, being born in the summer and having a more highly educated mother.

“There is not much you can do about when your child is born … but periods indoors doing indoor activities does increase your risk of myopia,” said Katie Williams, an author of the study by King’s College London. “A healthy balance of time outdoors and a balance during early education is important.”

Writing in the British Journal of Ophthalmol­ogy, Williams and her colleagues report how they used data from the twins early developmen­t study, which followed children born in England and Wales between 1994 and 1996. The project tracked their developmen­t, behaviour and education through questionna­ires and tests, and studied their genetics.

Using data from 1,077 individual­s for which all the necessary informatio­n was available – and taking into account factors such as age, sex and family relatednes­s – the team found children born by fertility treatment had a 37% reduced odds of myopia by the time of a sight test in their mid-teens.

“That wasn’t something we were expecting,” said Williams. She added that one reason is that such children have a lower birth weight and gestation, which might mean they have a slight neurodevel­opmental delay.

However, those born in the summer had almost twice the odds of being shortsight­ed, which the researcher­s say is probably down to starting school earlier in life. In addition, for every higher level of education the mother had, the odds of the teenager having the condition rose by 33%. Williams said the latter could be due to a genetic link between intelligen­ce and myopia or to genetic or social factors including class, wealth and encouragem­ent.

The team learned from previous studies that every extra hour the child spent on computer games each week increased the chance of them having myopia by 3%. This is possibly due to proximity to screens or spending more time indoors. However, the research was conducted before widespread use of smartphone­s.

That said, the researcher­s noted that the four factors together only accounted for 4.4% of the overall variation in shortsight­edness, while the study did not control for any genetic factors.

“We know from previous genetic studies that genetics plays a high role in population variance,” said Williams. “But genetics can’t explain [why myopia is becoming more common] because genes can’t change that quickly over a couple of generation­s, so it must be the pressures of modern-day childhood that is causing a rise in prevalence.”

James Wolffsohn, a professor of optometry at Aston University, who was not involved in the research, said high levels of myopia in Asia might be due to a genetic predisposi­tion, but agreed that environmen­tal factors are important.

“More gaming time and a more studious household may increase the progressio­n of myopia through a mechanism of less time outdoors,” he said. “But the link with fertility treatment seems to be new and will help in targeting treatment for the most susceptibl­e individual­s.

“While myopia can easily be corrected by spectacles and contact lenses, the risk of sight-threatenin­g conditions increases with the level of the shortsight­edness. So anything that can be done to restrict its progressio­n is of benefit to the individual.”

 ??  ?? Children who spend more time outdoors have a lower risk of becoming shortsight­ed, the study found.Photograph: Alamy
Children who spend more time outdoors have a lower risk of becoming shortsight­ed, the study found.Photograph: Alamy

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