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Adjustable eyeglasses help city kids in China

By | January 31, 2011, 1:19 PM PST

Over a billion people around the world need glasses but can’t get them. A new study with kids in China suggests that cheap glasses they can easily adjust themselves might be a solution.

Refractive error – or improperly corrected vision – is the biggest cause of low vision around the globe.

These ‘self-refracting’ glasses – called Adspecs and made by Adaptive Eyecare – can be adjusted to the right strength without trained optometrists, which are few in developing nations.

These oil-filled, self-adjustable glasses have been in the news for years and have already been given to 30,000 adults around the world by various aid organizations. But there’s little evidence for their usefulness for children.

So the researchers gave these glasses to 554 urban school children ages 12 through 17 in Guangzhou, China. Then they compared the children’s ability to self-correct their vision – under teacher supervision – with the results of a professional eye exam.

The adjustable glasses work via special lenses made of a clear membrane filled with silicon oil and held between two plastic discs. As Reuters explains, the wearer can change the amount of oil in the lenses using a removable syringe and dial that attach to the glasses’ frame. Adding or removing oil changes the curvature of the lenses, which alters their strength.

About 92% of the kids were able to correct their own nearsightedness using the glasses – compared with a nearly 100% rate when the students were given professional eye exams.

“What we have proven is the basic principle,” says Oxford physicist Joshua Silver, founder of Adaptive Eyecare, coauthor on the study, and the director of the Centre for Vision in the Developing World. “The large majority of teenaged children in an area where poor vision from uncorrected refractive error is common can achieve vision sufficient to meet the demands of the classroom.”

The specs cost only $19 per pair, but can’t correct astigmatism, are still too intricate to be robust, and aren’t really known for their stylishness. “A key part of further work will be the creation and test of designs which are appealing to kids and well-suited to the rough-and-tumble of daily life,” Silver says.

His goal is to get the price down to $1 a pair and distribute 1 billion pairs worldwide by 2020.

Many developing nations have as few as one trained eyecare professional for every one million people. Refractive error will rise into the top 10 global health issues affecting productivity and opportunities by 2030 – even surpassing HIV/AIDS in its global burden.

The study was published in Ophthalmology earlier this month. Watch a Gizmodo video on how it works.

Image: Adspecs via InventorSpot

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Janet Fang

About Janet Fang

Janet Fang is a contributing editor for SmartPlanet.

Janet Fang

Janet Fang
Contributing Editor, Healthcare

Janet Fang has written for Nature, Discover and the Point Reyes Light. She is currently a lab technician at Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory. She holds degrees from the University of California, Berkeley and Columbia University. She is based in New York.

Follow her on Twitter.

Janet Fang

Janet Fang

Janet does not have financial holdings that would influence how or what she covers.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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RE: Adjustable eyeglasses help city kids in China
Amazing. I suppose racks of distance visions lenses are out of the question? I mean the dollar store has all styles and all for a buck. They are primariy for reading. Can't they make them for "walking or driving?" Just asking.

I am aware of them as I buy 20 or 30 at a time and pass them out at nursing homes and any place older people are not reading. Many times they just can't see. And this is not China, it is the U.S.
Posted by IMWeira
1st Feb 2011
+1 Vote
+ -
RE: Adjustable eyeglasses help city kids in China
Exciting stuff. Next, some bright researcher will add computer circuits that will monitor brain waves, which in turn will cause a motor to run which will pump the oil to the lenses. Blurry vision? Just think about it.
Posted by ITOdeed
3rd Feb 2011
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RE: Adjustable eyeglasses help city kids in China
@IMWeira, while racks could be useful, you do have to understand
that those glasses are not necessarily as precise to fit the need of an
individual, though obviously better than nothing. The other benefit is the
ability for readjustment to deal with changing vision needs.
Posted by richard233
4th Feb 2011
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RE: Adjustable eyeglasses help city kids in China
It shouldn't be difficult to design out the syringe and make the lenses self-adjustable. Make the rims in two parts, front and back, with a mechanism to bring them closer together or further apart, or more or less engaged. This mechanism could, for instance, be a fine screw thread. If this movement squeezes the edges of the plastics disks together it would force more oil to the centre of the lens, increasing its power.
Brian Hardy
Posted by BrianHardy
6th Feb 2011
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