Science & technology | Ophthalmology

Short-sightedness was rare. In Asia, it is becoming ubiquitous

That is storing up problems for the future

2F70MT2 Path of light rays through the eye. Illustration of the 19th century. Germany. White background.

In the early 1980s Taiwan’s army realised it had a problem. More and more of its conscripts seemed to be short-sighted, meaning they needed glasses to focus on distant objects. “They were worried that if the worst happened [ie, an attack by China] their troops would be fighting at a disadvantage,” says Ian Morgan, who studies myopia at Australian National University, in Canberra. An island-wide study in 1983 confirmed that around 70% of Taiwanese school leavers needed glasses or contact lenses to see properly.

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