Eye Diseases

Childhood Myopia: Why It Is Increasing and What Parents Can Do

Childhood Myopia — Soleyes

Why is myopia becoming more common in children?

In the last 30 years, childhood myopia has increased significantly worldwide. Some epidemiological studies estimate that by 2050 almost 50% of the world’s population may be myopic.

Less time outdoors

The most important environmental factor identified is reduced exposure to natural light.

Why natural light matters

  • Sunlight stimulates dopamine release in the retina.
  • Dopamine appears to slow excessive eye growth.
  • Many hours spent indoors reduce this protective mechanism.
  • Children who spend at least 2 hours per day outdoors have lower myopia risk.

Prolonged near work

Short-distance visual tasks also play an important role.

Common near‑work activities

  • Tablets
  • Smartphones
  • Prolonged reading
  • Video games

It is not only the screens themselves, but many hours focusing at very close distances.

Anatomical consequence

  • Promotes elongation of the eyeball.
  • This elongation is the anatomical basis of myopia.

Genetic factors

Genetics still plays an important role.

  • If one parent is myopic, the risk increases.
  • If both parents are myopic, the risk increases even more.

However, genetics has not changed in the last 30 years — lifestyle has.

What can parents do?

Evidence‑based recommendations

  • At least 2 hours outdoors daily
  • Frequent breaks during near‑work or screen use
  • Maintain a reading distance greater than 30–40 cm
  • Limit prolonged screen use in young children
  • Regular eye examinations

Why early myopia detection matters

Myopia is not just a matter of needing glasses. High myopia increases lifetime risk of:

  • Retinal detachment
  • Glaucoma
  • Myopic macular degeneration

Early detection and control of childhood myopia is essential.

Recommended internal links

Explore related topics in English: https://soleyes.es/en/eye-diseases/

To book an appointment: https://soleyes.es/en/book-online/

Medical review

Reviewed by: Dr. Antonio Soler García, Medical Director at SolEyes Fuengirola.
Medical license number: 292907906.
Updated on: 2026-03-12.

Important notice

This content is informational and does not replace professional medical evaluation.