Does less sun mean more Myopia - June 2022


How to prevent short-sightedness - The Economist June 2022

Economist

After more than two years of covid-19, another epidemic may be the last thing anyone wants to read about. If so, then apologies in advance, for in this week’s episode of “ Babbage”, our podcast on science and technology, we investigate the rapid rise of short-sightedness or, to give it its technical name, myopia. You can also read my reporting on it.

The numbers are stunning. In some parts of East Asia—think Hong Kong, South Korea, Taiwan and parts of China—more than 80% of school-leavers need glasses to see properly. Fifty years ago, the share was 25% or less. The problem is less acute in Europe and the Americas, but even there the best numbers we have suggest that between 20% and 40% of young adults need their vision corrected. That is roughly an order of magnitude higher than what scientists think is the “natural” rate of myopia.

The rapid rise in Asia in particular has sunk the old consensus that myopia is mostly genetic. Instead, the strongest association seems to be with education. The more years of it you get, the higher the risk. And the more diligent a student you are, the more likely you are to be myopic too.

Of course, no one is arguing that learning new things directly causes short-sightedness. The culprit seems to be too much time spent indoors, where the lighting is dim. Studies on animals now strongly suggest that frequent exposure to bright sunlight is necessary for young eyes to develop properly and to be able to see well in adulthood. That is also thought to explain why myopia is so common in East Asia, where kids often follow a full day of schooling with several hours of private tutoring.

Does it matter? Anyone who wears glasses or contact lenses will tell you they are annoying. But East Asian governments have come to see the myopia epidemic as a public-health problem, too. Being short-sighted predisposes you to more serious sight problems in later life, some of which are untreatable and can cause blindness. The risk is especially high among those with severe myopia—a threshold already crossed by 10-20% of school-leavers in some East Asian countries.

Fortunately, the cure seems straightforward. Booting kids outside exposes them to more sunlight. Trials in Taiwan, where children are forced to spend more of the school day outdoors, have cut the numbers who go on to develop myopia. And a range of new technologies, including contact lenses designed to reshape the eye, and eye drops made from atropine (the toxin in deadly nightshade), seem able to slow progression once it has started.

Finally, it’s worth pointing out something else. The one thing that does not seem to be responsible for the epidemic of myopia is the proliferation of screens. The rise in short-sightedness in East Asia began decades before smartphones, laptops and e-readers had been invented. So if you decide to read my reporting on myopia, please do so on the device of your choosing. But afterwards, if you have kids, send them out into the garden. As your own mother no doubt told you, it’s for their own good.

Elsewhere in The Economist we present the obituary of a mastodon; examine plans by Alphabet (Google’s parent company) to become a force in health care; and our colleagues in the Films team tell us how scientists are searching for alien life.


VitaminDWiki pages with "Myopia" in title (17 as of June 2022)

This list is automatically updated

Items found: 22
Title Modified
Worse Myopia in young adults if lower vitamin D - Sept 2021 01 Sep, 2023
Myopia not related to Vitamin D if assume same D generated any time of the day - Sept 2023 01 Sep, 2023
Myopia epidemic and Vitamin D - many studies 23 Aug, 2023
Myopia, AMD, Dry Eye, and Diabetic Retinopathy are all associated with low Vitamin D - April 2023 24 Apr, 2023
The Myopia Generation (Hint - sunshine and vitamin D) - Sept 2022 13 Sep, 2022
Does less sun mean more Myopia - June 2022 23 Jun, 2022
Myopia may be related to low vitamin D 09 Jun, 2022
Moderate to high Myopia 2X more likely if low Vitamin D (China) – June 2021 10 May, 2022
Probable relationship between myopia and vitamin D – Feb 2011 30 Jun, 2021
Vitamin D and Myopia, AMD, Diabetic Retinopathy, Uveitis, Glaucoma, VDR etc. – May 2015 18 Nov, 2019
Risk of childhood myopia decreased if spend more time in the sun (or supplement vitamin D) – March 2019 07 May, 2019
Less High Myopia if high vitamin D (Korea) – Jan 2019 25 Jan, 2019
Myopia in adults is 8 percent more likely for every 4 ng less Vitamin D – meta-analysis July 2018 21 Jul, 2018
Myopia, dry eye and Vitamin D – PhD 2017 02 Jan, 2018
Myopia boom (still no mention of vitamin D) – Nature April 2015 09 Dec, 2017
Less myopia associated with work outdoors, less education, higher Vitamin D, higher lutein – Dec 2016 06 Mar, 2017
More sun when young, less myopia when old – Jan 2017 06 Mar, 2017
Myopia 2 times more likely if Vitamin D Receptor problem – June 2011 12 Jan, 2017
Severe Myopia associated with low vitamin D and smoking (which also reduces vitamin D) - Jan 2014 12 Jan, 2017
Hypothesis: Low vitamin D linked to Myopia 12 Jan, 2017
Sun exposure reduces Myopia – June 2011 19 Apr, 2015
Relationship between myopia and vitamin D – Feb 2011 17 Oct, 2013

VitaminDWiki video - Does Less Sun mean More Disease


VitaminDWiki - UVB added in classroom reduced cavities, increased height, increased academics. etc suspect less Myopia too


Search Google Scholar for Myopia and Vitamin D: 5,730 as of Aug 2023

Google Scholar

  • BENEFIT OF NUTRITION SUPPLEMENT WITH VITAMIN D IN REDUCING THE RISK OF MYOPIA AMONG CHILDREN - 2022 PDF
  • Time spent outdoors through childhood and adolescence – assessed by 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentration – and risk of myopia at 20 years - PDF
  • Time spent outdoors in childhood is associated with reduced risk of myopia as an adult - March 2021 PDF


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