A new study has found that spending as little as 15 minutes a day outside in bright sunlight could help prevent myopia in children.
The study aimed to explore different sun exposure patterns and their association with the progression of myopia, or nearsightedness, in children.
Study Details
The JAMA study was a one-year prospective cohort that followed 2,976 children who were approximately 7 (7.2) years of age and split almost evenly between boys (48.8 percent) and girls (51.2 percent).The children wore smartwatches to track their time spent outdoors and exposure to sunlight. They consistently wore the smartwatches for at least six hours a day over a minimum of 90 days during the study period, which lasted from December 2017 to December 2018. Additionally, none of the participants had myopia when the study began.
Decrease in Myopic Shift
The study authors wanted to find which of the patterns of outdoor exposure could reduce the “myopic shift,” which is the progressive worsening of nearsightedness or myopia. They found that the outdoor exposure patterns in which the children spent a minimum of 15 minutes outdoors with a sunlight intensity of 2,000 lux or more were associated with less myopic shift, meaning these conditions helped reduce myopia progression over the one-year study period.Everyday Lux Examples
A minimum of 2,000 lux was found necessary to slow myopia progression in the children. As a reference, an article in Oxford Academic states that a full moon at its highest in the sky in mid-latitudes produces approximately 0.05–0.2 lux. By contrast, the light intensity on an overcast day is approximately 1,000 lux, full daylight (not direct sun) is 10,000 to 25,000, and direct sunlight is 32,000 to 130,000 lux, according to Ao[n²].Myopia in Children
The study states that myopia has become a significant global health issue that has seen a rise in cases over the past three decades, especially in East and Southeast Asia, where nearly 90 percent of young people are affected.“The trend of earlier onset of myopia among school-aged children suggests an increasingly serious epidemic of high myopia and pathologic myopia in the future,” the study stated.
It goes on to say that growing rates of myopia increase the risk of conditions that can endanger vision, such as glaucoma, cataracts, and myopic maculopathy, which impact quality of life and increase health care costs for those affected.
Conclusion
While the study offers valuable insights, the authors acknowledge several limitations. Since the research was limited to children in Shanghai, the results may not apply to other regions. Additionally, the one-year duration might not be long enough to fully capture the relationship between outdoor exposure and myopic shift.They also note that using smartwatches could have underestimated light levels, concluding that more research is needed to confirm their findings over extended periods and in different populations and settings.
Ultimately, the authors suggest that to effectively prevent myopia, efforts should focus both on the total time children spend outdoors and ensuring they are exposed to sufficiently intense sunlight for at least 15 minutes at a time.