As one meta-analysis put it:
It’s estimated that an increase of one hour per day of outdoor time could reduce the occurrence of myopia in children by 45%.
Make sure your kids spend time outside, folks!
My eyes have been terrible since 1st grade. My prescription got as high as 9s.
Then I got cataract surgery on one eye, and I can see nearly perfectly without glasses for the first time in my life. This summer, I’m getting the other one done, and I won’t have to wear glasses anymore, for the first time in my life.
Anyway, the point is: As I was talking to the eye surgeon, and mentioned my bad eyesight, he told me why: I have the eyeballs of a man who is 7’2" tall, jammed into my 5’11" skull. Apparently, I have enormous eyes, which nobody has ever mentioned to me, other than one brief girlfriend who used to comment on my gigantic green eyes.
If I had to get something big from a 7’2" inch man, why did it have to be eyeballs?
You were made for anime, not office work
Sometimes I wonder if people see numbers like 45% and think “OMG, 45% chance!” instead of “small number * 1.45 = another small number.”
Considering that a fairly large percentage of children develop myopia (as high as 80-90% in some countries) a 45% reduction would be fairly significant, no? Or am I missing something
where are you getting these numbers… from what I can see, the global average was 23% in 2000 and 34% today.
The 80-90% claim seems to be repeated in various areas on the internet, including by the American Academy of Ophthalmology, which I assume to be reputable:
Over recent decades, the prevalence of myopia has skyrocketed, particularly in Asia. In countries like China, Japan, Singapore, South Korea, and Japan, up to 80-90% of teenagers and young adults are now myopic.
Of course these local averages are still consistent with a lower global average
I spent 90% of my early childhood outdoors. Didn’t work.




