Friday, November 14, 2025

FAMILY VISION CARE and YOUR CHILD’S MYOPIA

 

FAMILY VISION CARE’s ROLE ON YOUR CHILD’S MYOPIA MANAGEMENT

By HJArago, November 13, 2025, Lipa City, Batangas

 

WHAT IS MYOPIA


Myopia, commonly known as nearsightedness, is an eye condition where an individual sees near objects clearly but appears blurred in distance. A healthy eye should see objects clearly both upclose and further away.  


PHILIPPINE DATA


According to Philstar Global, a Philippine news outfit’s article on Health And Family, Early Intervention Key to Managing Myopia or Nearsightedness in Children by Dolly Dy-Zulueta reports current global data have shown that over 22.9% of the world population have myopia with 2.7% having high myopia. It is predicted to increase to 49.8% and 9.8% of which is high myopia by 2050.


In the Philippines, where approximately 30% of the population are children between the ages of six to 18 years old, an estimated eight million Filipino children may suffer from myopia.


A Philippine Eye Research Institute study has shown that Filipino children are most likely to be affected by visual impairment, which doubles when they reach adolescence. As students massively transitioned to the digital platform brought about by the pandemic, research has shown that children who use screens for greater than three hours per day are almost four times more likely to be myopic compared to those spending one hour on screens per day. [1]  


Currently, 35% of the country’s children population already has myopia. It is predicted that 50% of Filipinos will have varying levels of nearsightedness in 2050 10% of which will have nigh myopia.


PACIFIC DATA


Locally here in the Pacific Region and Asia, consistent with World Economic Forum’s report on Centre for Health and Healthcare, their article Eye Health Is Crucial for Asia Pacific’s Economic and Social Future on May 15, 2025 [2] reports that:

 

  • APAC shoulders a disproportionate burden from vision loss, affecting people’s wellbeing, independence and opportunities — and costing the region billions in lost productivity each year.
  • Yet, around 90% of vision impairment is preventable or treatable with appropriate care.
  • Collaborative, cross-sector solutions that connect eye health to healthy-ageing strategies and chronic disease management can deliver economic and societal benefits.

 

 (Source: https://www.weforum.org/stories/2025/05/the-role-of-vision-health-in-asia-pacific-s-economic-and-social-future/) 


Achieving the World Health Organization’s Vision for Everyone by 2030 requires building on existing efforts and working together to scale solutions that reach those most in need. This can include:

  • Prioritizing and integrating eye care into public health strategies, including
    non-communicable disease frameworks, healthy ageing policies and primary care pathways.
  • Encouraging early detection through coordinated public education and expanded access.
  • Investing in sustainable care models and innovative treatments that reduce treatment burden and improve long-term outcomes.
  • Using digital tools, including telemedicine and AI-based screening, to close gaps in access, especially in lower-resource settings.


This requires commitment from all stakeholders — healthcare providers, policy-makers, industry and patient advocates. By working collaboratively, these actions can help ensure people receive the care they need, when and where they need it.


Making vision health a regional priority


Vision loss is not inevitable, but changing its trajectory in Asia Pacific will take more than awareness alone. It calls for turning insights into action through sustained collaboration across sectors and ensuring vision health is embedded within the region’s broader health and development strategies.


Protecting sight is about empowering people to live independently, fulfil their potential, care for loved ones and stay connected to the world around them. When people can participate more fully in society — including at home, in their communities and in the workforce — the benefits ripple outward, strengthening families, communities and economies. By acting together across sectors, we have the chance to turn these insights into lasting impact for millions across Asia Pacific.


GLOBAL DATA


According to the World Health Organization (WHO) [3] Globally, at least 1 billion people have a near or distance vision impairment that could have been prevented or has yet to be addressed. In the absence of timely detection, reduced or absent eyesight can have long-term personal and economic effects. Vision impairment affects people of all ages, with the majority being over the age of 50. Young children with early onset severe vision impairment can experience lower levels of educational achievement, and in adults it often affects quality of life through lower productivity, decreased workforce participation and high rates of depression.


Vision impairment and blindness impact the life of people everywhere. In low- and middle-income settings the burden of vision impairment can be even greater due to fewer opportunities to access the most essential eye care services.


Cataracts and uncorrected refractive errors are estimated to be the leading causes of vision impairment; however, other causes for vision impairment cannot be ignored. Age-related macular degeneration, glaucoma, long standing systemic conditions like diabetes causing diabetic retinopathy, infectious diseases of the eye and trauma to the eye are all equally important causes for vision impairment that need to be addressed. 


Based on WHO’s report on Blindness and Vision Impairment [4] published on 10 August 2023, 50% of the world’s population will be myopic in 2050. Here are some key facts of the global visual health as of 2023 [5]:

 

  • Globally, at least 2.2 billion people have a near or distance vision impairment. In at least 1 billion of these, vision impairment could have been prevented or is yet to be addressed.
  • The leading causes of vision impairment and blindness at a global level are refractive errors and cataracts.
  • It is estimated that globally only 36% of people with a distance vision impairment due to refractive error and only 17% of people with vision impairment due to cataract have received access to an appropriate intervention.
  • Vision impairment poses an enormous global financial burden, with the annual global cost of productivity estimated to be US$ 411 billion.
  • Vision loss can affect people of all ages; however, most people with vision impairment and blindness are over the age of 50 years.


NEARSIGHTEDNESS IMPACT TO DAILY LIFE


  1. School and Learning


For young students and older learners, poor vision makes reading difficult especially in school that requires blackboards, bulletin boards and other distance activities such as sports and social events. This can affect their school performance and self-esteem.


  1. Work and Social Productivity


Adults with undetected myopia may find it difficult to perform tasks that require distance vision—such as presenting on meetings, sports, church, concerts and driving. This greatly reduces efficiency and safety and may affect job promotions and improvement of his family’s economic status.


  1. Mental and Emotional Well-Being


Frustration because of myopia affects both children and adults. This will leave them left behind and anxious especially when they do not know what is wrong with their vision.


 PREVENTION AND CHANGES IN THE FILIPINO LIFESTYLE


Some changes in lifestyle may reduce myopia and its severity.


  1. Encourage Children to Play Outdoors


Let them play outside. Allow them to run and jump for at least two hours a day under the sun. Ideally, every morning and afternoon. The longer the hours at play outside, the better. Studies have shown that children who play at least 2 hours each day outside have lower myopia rates. The Filipino family tend to be overly protective of their children. Filipino parents would rather have their children inside the house or at the garage. This maybe detrimental to the child’s developing eyes and brain. At this age, children need to develop their near, intermediate, distance, depth, color, center, peripheral and dynamic vision. This does not include their need for psycho-social as well as emotional and physical development. Playing outside should also meet these needs.


  1. Limit Screen Time


Sadly, many Filipino parents have their children nannied by their tablets and cellphones for hours on end perhaps due to their busy schedules. 


Statistics point to numerous visual, behavioral, social, physical and emotional effects on children because of this. Although it is true that digital devices are here to stay, setting up boundaries on their device use is a good start in controling the increase of myopia on children. Eye health professionals suggest maximum of two hours each day for their device use. This must be enforced by the parents consistently.  


For the adults, apply the 20-20-20 rule: every 20 minutes, look at something 20 feet away for at least 20 seconds.


  1. Proper Lighting and Ergonomics


Avoid reading in dim lighting, bad posture, bad air-conditioning positioning and lighting locations.


  1. Regular Eye Checkups


Make sure that children and adults get their eyes examined at least once a year, even if no symptoms are present and even if their errors of refraction have been corrected. Have your eyes regularly checked by either an optometrist and an ophthalmologist.

5.     

5. On-line Purchase of Prescription Eyeglasses, Questionable Contact lenses and Eyedrops


Many Filipino parent, to save on their daily costs, resort to online purchases of unproven online health products and self-diagnosing. This should not be. Many doctors are reporting of complications of eye diseases and vision problems because of this. We suggest that the parent schedule their child’s doctor’s appointment and have their prescriptions from an eye doctor because only the eye doctor is duly authorized to diagnose and prescribe.


    

Myopia Correction for Better Vision


Myopia is not merely not just a blurring of vision at distance. It is now a public health concern in the Philippines that needs to be addressed in the home and at school. If unchecked, myopia will affect learning, and work. It will affect your daily life and your self esteem.


Thankfully, Family Vision Care has a variety of options that will correct Myopia from Zeiss lenses to Myopia Control Lenses to contact lenses, drops, Orthokeratology lenses and much more.  We provide diagnostics, customized treatments for each patient with care.


Your Family Vision Care is committed to helping the Filipino family achieve better vision one family at a time.


Only you have the power to improve your family’s eye health.


Book for your doctor’s appointment online at Family Vision Care Philippines at their Google, Facebook, Instagram and Tiktok accounts at @familyvisioncareph [6] or with WHOeyes [7]  and Zeiss Online Vision Screening Check[8].

 

 

Referrences:

[1]https://www.philstar.com/lifestyle/health-and-family/2023/06/19/2272987/early-intervention-key-managing-myopia-or-nearsightedness-children 

[2] https://www.weforum.org/stories/2025/05/the-role-of-vision-health-in-asia-pacific-s-economic-and-social-future/

[3] https://www.who.int/health-topics/blindness-and-vision-loss#tab=tab_1

[4] https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/blindness-and-visual-impairment

[5] GBD 2019 Blindness and Vision Impairment Collaborators; Vision Loss Expert Group of the Global Burden of Disease Study. Causes of blindness and vision impairment in 2020 and trends over 30 years, and prevalence of avoidable blindness in relation to VISION 2020: the Right to Sight: an analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study. Lancet Glob Health. 2021 Feb;9(2):e144-e160. doi: 10.1016/S2214-109X(20)30489-7.

[6] https://share.google/SrHJOdqWehLQPUGwX

[7] https://www.who.int/teams/noncommunicable-diseases/sensory-functions-disability-and-rehabilitation/whoeyes

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