by Emily Stone
Myopia, or
nearsightedness, is a refractive error, which means that the eye does not bend
or refract light properly to a single focus in order to see images clearly. The
disorder causes close objects to look clear but distant objects to appear
blurred. It is the leading cause of visual impairment that affects on average
30-50% of adults in the United States and Europe. It can be inherited and is
often discovered in children between the ages of eight and twelve. However
during the teenage years, when the body grows rapidly, myopia may become worse.
Patients with myopia have a higher risk of developing a detached retina, and a
serious condition has a higher risk of developing glaucoma and cataracts.
Recently,
a study has shown a possible link between the intensity of schooling and the
onset of myopia. As societies have developed formal education systems,
incidences of myopia has increased from around 1% to as much as 80- 90% in
young adults. There is a direct correlation between rapid increases in the
prevalence of myopia and rapid changes in access to education. An example of
this is in East Asia after the Second World War and in China at the end of the
cultural revolution.
Looking
at East Asia in more detail, there has been a trend of increasingly early onset
of myopia in the school years in East Asia This is probably due to early intense educational
pressures such as homework at preschool level, combined with little time for
play outdoors. As a result, almost 50% of children in East Asia are now myopic
by the end of primary school, compared with less than 10% in the British ALSPAC
study. The number of people affected by myopia is expected to increase from
1.4billion to 5 billion by 2050, based on existing trends. This would affect
around half of the world’s population.
Whilst researchers have long been
aware of the correlation between myopia and education, it has not been clear
whether increasing exposure to education causes myopia, myopic children are
more studious, or socioeconomic position leads to myopia and higher levels of
education. However a new study by researchers at the University of Bristol and
Cardiff University used a technique to Mendelian randomisation in order to
prove the causation between myopia and education.
They analysed 44 genetic variants
associated with myopia and 69 genetic variations associated with years of
schooling for 67,798 men and women aged 40 to 69 years from the UK Biobank
database. After taking into account potentially influential factors, Mendelian
randomisation analyses suggested that every additional year of education was
associated with more myopia. For example, a university graduate from the UK
with 17 years of education would, on average, be at least 1 dioptre more myopic
than someone who left school at 16. This level of nearsightedness would mean
the university graduate would require glasses for driving. However, there was
very little evidence to suggest that myopia lead people to remain in education
for longer.
In conclusion, this study that
education causes nearsightedness is cause for us all to quit school and ruin
our eyes by spending our entire time watching television instead.
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