Is it true that under-correction for myopia is more prone to myopia than full correction? The child is nearsighted but unwilling to wear children's eyeglasses. Do you have to wear them?

 

The child is nearsighted and has glasses. But the child never wants to wear glasses, saying that sitting in the first row can see clearly during class; If wearing glasses, classmates will give him an unpleasant nickname and make fun of him.

 

Parents attach great importance to this. Whether to wear glasses when nearsighted, whether to wear them at all times, and how to match kids' eyeglasses near me vary from person to person. Decide to take the child for an eye examination and carefully record the results, asking what to do.

 

How to wear glasses for myopia? Does the same prescription have different opinions? Under correction, myopia will increase faster. Some people think full correction is necessary and can be done with glasses like this.

 

Alternatively, if the child says they can see clearly. It doesn't affect their studies, wearing glasses can hurt their psychology (classmates make fun of it), and if myopia is not corrected (not wearing glasses), it's even less likely to be nearsighted, so there's no need to wear childrens glasses, that's all.

 

Some people believe that the impact of under-correction and full correction on myopia progression is the same, so glasses do not need to be replaced, and wearing the original under-correction glasses will not lead to a faster increase in myopia.

 

Undercorrection is defined as the ability to improve visual acuity by at least 2 lines in subjective optometry by adding a negative mirror and not changing the mirror within 1 year. The definition of under correction is the difference between the equivalent spherical degree of glasses currently worn and the results of computer optometry for ciliary muscle paralysis.