Myopia management: treatment options for progressive myopia
Slowing the progression of myopia in children and adolescents can be achieved through a range of options. If a child is already wearing eyeglasses or has progressive myopia, an individualized treatment plan should be drawn up by an ophthalmologist and/or optometrist. This myopia management plan may include pharmaceutical eye drops, special eyeglass lenses, or special contact lenses for day or night.
In addition to treatment plans, it is still important for parents to ensure that their child consistently spends more than two hours per day outdoors. At the same time, they should limit the time children and adolescents spend in front of tablets, computers, smartphones, and reading books and comics.
Collaboration between the ophthalmologist and an eye care professional is crucial in determining the optimal treatment—be it through visual aids or pharmacologically, or a combination of the two. The overall aim is to slow down the progression of myopia through targeted myopia management and ideally to reduce eye growth to the level of non-myopic eyes, or as close as possible to it. This can, for example, prevent very high prescription values and the associated risks to eye health.
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A myopia management program includes a comprehensive patient history covering risk factors, suitable tests, and risk assessment, as well as treatment measures and behavioral recommendations. All of this must be jointly determined by the child and their parents, ideally in close collaboration with an ophthalmologist and optometrist or eye care professional. It is also essential that regular checkups are tailored to the child's individual refraction status and, where applicable, to the respective treatment method.