Wear Eyeglasses When Using A Computer Depends On The Degree Of Wearers
Wear Eyeglasses When Using A Computer Depends On The Degree Of Wearers
Whether a person with myopia needs to wear glasses when using a computer depends on their degree of myopia, and everyone's eyeglass online situation is different.

Whether a person with myopia needs to wear glasses when using a computer depends on their degree of myopia, and everyone's eyeglass online situation is different.

 

Generally speaking, people with myopia below 150 degrees do not need to wear glasses to see up close because they can see clearly without glasses. But if a person with myopia of three to four hundred degrees does not wear glasses when looking at a computer, they need to be particularly close to see clearly.

 

We know that the increase in eye degree is mainly related to looking up close. The closer the distance, the longer the time of looking up, and the more likely it is to become nearsighted. For people with a degree exceeding 150 degrees, removing their glasses to look up close may make them look closer, and the degree is more likely to increase.

 

The suggestion is to wear eyeglasses online when working as long as the degree exceeds 150 degrees. Then, when you can see clearly, place the computer as far away as possible. This is the simplest way to avoid the increase in degree caused by working close together.

 

Computer optometry may be the most accurate, but it is also the least trustworthy. You cannot use computer optometry to match glasses.

 

Computer optometry is only a rough judgment of the refractive parameters of the eyes. The specific degree of prescription needs to be determined by the optometrist based on the customer's eye environment, eye adaptation, refractive status, and many other factors, in order to provide the most reasonable eyeglass online prescription.

 

Computer optometry is not equivalent to prescription glasses. When we go for optometry, we should look for a reliable one. Of course, a better optometry machine can help us better understand the customer's eyes.

disclaimer

What's your reaction?

Comments

https://timessquarereporter.com/public/assets/images/user-avatar-s.jpg

0 comment

Write the first comment for this!

Facebook Conversations