I am very conflicted about whether to match my child's glasses well or not. My main concerns are whether the child does not have difficulty seeing clearly when looking at the blackboard and whether long-term wearing of glasses hurts children. With these questions in mind, I searched for kids' eyeglasses online.

 

Last year, we organized a student experience and found that the child's vision in the right eye was normal, but in the left eye, it was nearsighted. We suggest further verification. I went for dilated pupil optometry and the conclusion given is consistent with the test. Looking up papers and research literature, it is indeed true that there have been a large number of research results targeting children's eye problems.

 

Compared with wearing frame childrens glasses, wearing corneal reshaping glasses can effectively inhibit the elongation of AL in the affected eye of children with monocular myopia, control the progression of myopia in the affected eye, promote the elongation of the contralateral healthy eye axis, and increase refractive power, reduce the value of anisometropia, and to some extent solve the problem of uneven development of the binocular visual axis, promoting the coordinated development of both eyes.

 

Compared to those who do not wear frame glasses for correction, wearing frame children's eyeglasses for correction can better regulate the patient's visual function. For patients with low myopia, it is recommended to wear frame glasses for correction. Moreover, it indicates that the harm of not wearing glasses after myopia is much greater than wearing glasses.

 

Not wearing glasses can cause squinting and pulling at the corners of the eyes due to unclear vision, increasing the workload of the ciliary muscle, thereby exacerbating visual fatigue in children and leading to a faster decline in vision.