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Association between time spent on smart devices and change in refractive error: a 1-year prospective observational study among Hong Kong children and adolescents

Association between time spent on smart devices and change in refractive error: a 1-year prospective observational study among Hong Kong children and adolescents
Association between time spent on smart devices and change in refractive error: a 1-year prospective observational study among Hong Kong children and adolescents
This study examined the association between smart device usage and the 1-year change in refractive error among a representative sample of Hong Kong children and adolescents aged 8–14 years. A total of 1597 participants (49.9% male, mean age 10.9, SD 2.0) who completed both baseline (2017–2018) and 1-year follow-up (2018–2019) eye examinations were included in the present study. The non-cycloplegic auto-refractive error was measured and the average spherical equivalent refraction (SER) was analyzed. The participants also self-reported their smart device usage at baseline. Multivariate regression adjusted for age, sex, baseline SER, parents’ short-sightedness, BMI, time spent on moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA), and caregiver-reported socio-economic status showed that, compared with the reference group (<2 h per day on both smartphone and tablet usages), those who spent ≥2 h per day using a smartphone and <2 h per day using a tablet had a significantly negative shift in refractive error (1-year change in SER −0.25 vs. −0.09 D, p = 0.01) for the right eye, while the level of significance was marginal (1-year change −0.28 vs. −0.15 D, p = 0.055) for the left eye. To conclude, our data suggested spending at most 2 h per day on both smartphones and tablets.
Handheld device, Myopia, Prospective, Smartphone, Tablet, Teenage
1661-7827
Do, Chi Wai
f95a99ca-4db2-40de-a00c-3c9438c9ae8f
Chan, Lily Y.L.
402e341b-9be2-4d0f-ba38-f4eed4f2489b
Tse, Andy C.Y.
e0d6b2be-a736-43ac-b03e-d2d58a56e114
Cheung, Teris
230558d0-9254-44ab-a7e5-aab6ad90e205
So, Billy C.L.
c1241458-cc83-4be9-b36a-c4f441a6f3ef
Tang, Wing Chun
f85ea433-5e85-48b2-b3ac-2966a1862761
Yu, W. Y.
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Chu, Geoffrey C.H.
3aa7723e-de89-4221-aa20-c14ae3d241ed
Szeto, Grace P.Y.
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Lee, Regina L.T.
76f8a357-ae4e-4e60-9583-75e033aa9fe7
Lee, Paul H.
02620eab-ae7f-4a1c-bad1-8a50e7e48951
et al.
Do, Chi Wai
f95a99ca-4db2-40de-a00c-3c9438c9ae8f
Chan, Lily Y.L.
402e341b-9be2-4d0f-ba38-f4eed4f2489b
Tse, Andy C.Y.
e0d6b2be-a736-43ac-b03e-d2d58a56e114
Cheung, Teris
230558d0-9254-44ab-a7e5-aab6ad90e205
So, Billy C.L.
c1241458-cc83-4be9-b36a-c4f441a6f3ef
Tang, Wing Chun
f85ea433-5e85-48b2-b3ac-2966a1862761
Yu, W. Y.
4cca6f0a-badb-4f1c-8b38-da29ba0b9e09
Chu, Geoffrey C.H.
3aa7723e-de89-4221-aa20-c14ae3d241ed
Szeto, Grace P.Y.
9e285ec0-522b-4581-bafa-6a6e79101982
Lee, Regina L.T.
76f8a357-ae4e-4e60-9583-75e033aa9fe7
Lee, Paul H.
02620eab-ae7f-4a1c-bad1-8a50e7e48951

Do, Chi Wai, Chan, Lily Y.L., Tse, Andy C.Y. and Lee, Paul H. , et al. (2020) Association between time spent on smart devices and change in refractive error: a 1-year prospective observational study among Hong Kong children and adolescents. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 17 (23), [8923]. (doi:10.3390/ijerph17238923).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This study examined the association between smart device usage and the 1-year change in refractive error among a representative sample of Hong Kong children and adolescents aged 8–14 years. A total of 1597 participants (49.9% male, mean age 10.9, SD 2.0) who completed both baseline (2017–2018) and 1-year follow-up (2018–2019) eye examinations were included in the present study. The non-cycloplegic auto-refractive error was measured and the average spherical equivalent refraction (SER) was analyzed. The participants also self-reported their smart device usage at baseline. Multivariate regression adjusted for age, sex, baseline SER, parents’ short-sightedness, BMI, time spent on moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA), and caregiver-reported socio-economic status showed that, compared with the reference group (<2 h per day on both smartphone and tablet usages), those who spent ≥2 h per day using a smartphone and <2 h per day using a tablet had a significantly negative shift in refractive error (1-year change in SER −0.25 vs. −0.09 D, p = 0.01) for the right eye, while the level of significance was marginal (1-year change −0.28 vs. −0.15 D, p = 0.055) for the left eye. To conclude, our data suggested spending at most 2 h per day on both smartphones and tablets.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 28 November 2020
Published date: 1 December 2020
Additional Information: Funding Information: Funding: The Food and Health Bureau of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, China, provided financial support in the form of a grant from the Health and Medical Research Fund (Ref 13144041). The equipment/resources were donated by a COVD Research Grant, Vision of Love Fund, and The Hong Kong Jockey Club Charities Trust Fund. The sponsors had no role in designing or conducting this research. Publisher Copyright: © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
Keywords: Handheld device, Myopia, Prospective, Smartphone, Tablet, Teenage

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 475041
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/475041
ISSN: 1661-7827
PURE UUID: b8f1434e-02ef-4a76-939e-e5f312ef5036
ORCID for Paul H. Lee: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5729-6450

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Date deposited: 09 Mar 2023 18:38
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:08

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Contributors

Author: Chi Wai Do
Author: Lily Y.L. Chan
Author: Andy C.Y. Tse
Author: Teris Cheung
Author: Billy C.L. So
Author: Wing Chun Tang
Author: W. Y. Yu
Author: Geoffrey C.H. Chu
Author: Grace P.Y. Szeto
Author: Regina L.T. Lee
Author: Paul H. Lee ORCID iD
Corporate Author: et al.

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