The Myopia Challenge
An extensive research conducted by Professor
Francis Young and his team conclusively proved
that 98% of the Eskimo children do not need
glasses until they are introduced to schools
where 60% suffered from myopia. This is contrasted
to the older generation of parents and grandparents,
who lived a traditional outdoor life were
not myopic. Therefore, vision problems are
usually not inherited, but resulted from
poor vision habits, mental strain and environmental
factors. Francis A. Young et al, "The
Transmission of Refractive Errors within
Eskimo Families," American Journal of Optometry
and Archives of the American Academy of Optometry
46, no. 9, September, 1969.
A report by the Navy's Bureau of Medicine
and Surgery found that submarine personnel working
in a confined visual environment develop myopia
much faster than other Navy personnel who operate
in less confined spaces. "The Effect of Time
in Submarine Service on Vision, Ira Schwartz
and N. Elaine Sandberg," Medical Research Laboratory
Report no. 253; Bureau of Medicine and Surgery,
Navy Department project NM 003041.57.03.
"Shortsightedness is on the rise around the world (about half the global
population is expected to become myopic), but nowhere more quickly than in
Asia. Particularly among ethnic Chinese. Only a few begin to have trouble focusing
on distant objects as toddlers. By the end of primary school, though, it's
a problem for three out of five pupils in Hong Kong and half of those in Singapore.
And with nine out of 10 university students in those cities having less than
20-20 vision, glasses or contact lenses are now par for the course. The picture
is much the same in places like Taiwan." Asiaweek, 16-06-2000
“In Singapore, one in two children is likely to be myopic by the time
the child is Primary 6. One in four children is myopic by the time he or she
is in Primary 1. Professor Donald Tan, the director of The Singapore Eye Research
Institute (SERI) said 79 percent of Singaporeans aged between 16 and 25 are
myopic,” Straits Times Newspaper, 13 February 2003.
Many Questions But Few Answers
Pinpointing the root cause and prescribing
solutions to vision problems such as short-sightedness,
long-sightedness, astigmatism, and presbyopia
have plagued eye-care professionals till
today.
What is most alarming is that the rate and
degree of myopia in children are increasing
every year.
Consider the following questions.
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What is vision? |
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How do we see? |
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Why do the eyes appear to be the
only part of the physical body that
is not self-healing? |
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Why do eye-care specialists almost
unanimously assume that prescribing
glasses is the only solution, and never
considered alternative approaches such
as preventive or remedial/therapy vision
care? |
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Why do we continue to prescribe glasses
for vision problems that only continue
to deteriorate? |
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What if glasses
are really eye "crutches"
that only hamper natural self-healing
of the eyes is true? |
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Would a mildly myopic person go blind
if glasses are not worn all the time? |
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Do we know the root cause of the
problem? Is myopia inherited from our
parents? |
Read more about The Bates Method and the Traditional
View to vision challenges. |