Study: HK has world's highest rate of myopic kids
Hong Kong tops a world ranking for 6-year-old children with myopia, after a survey found that 11.4 percent — or more than 1 in 10 — are nearsighted.
A research team of the Chinese University of Hong Kong, which unveiled its findings on Thursday, said the numbers in Hong Kong surpassed other countries and regions such as Beijing (7.4 percent), Singapore (6.6 percent) and India (5.9 percent).
The prevalence of myopia in children will increase nearly fourfold to 44.5 percent for 9-year-olds, according to a local vision screening program for more than 13,000 4-to-9-year-old children in Hong Kong.
Researchers believe this trend is related to the environment around schoolchildren entering primary schools, including an increasing academic workload.
Habits such as keeping a distance of 30 cm when reading and moving the focus away from computer screens for 20 to 30 seconds every 20 to 30 minutes may help slow down the progression of nearsightedness in children, they said.
- State Council to supervise probe into factory explosion in North China's Inner Mongolia
- Chinese courts see surge in foreign-related cases
- Chinese scientists achieve breakthrough in precise protein degradation
- Chinese researchers develop blink-powered eye-tracking device to help paralyzed patients control wheelchairs
- China's commercial crewed spacecraft test capsule completes land-buffering verification
- China's job market stable in 2025 with 5.2% surveyed urban unemployment rate
































