PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

OU-MRU: High levels of television exposure affect visual acuity in children

Okayama University Medical Research Updates (OU-MRU) Vol.90

OU-MRU: High levels of television exposure affect visual acuity in children
2021-05-20
(Press-News.org) It is ingrained in parents to curtail the hours their children spend in front of the television. Anecdotal evidence suggests that prolonged viewing of television and use of smart gadgets during early years can adversely affect a child's eyesight and behavioral development. However, there is little scientific evidence to support such observations on the effects of excessive television exposure on children's visual acuity. Now, Professor MATSUO Toshihiko (M.D., Ph.D.) and Professor YORIFUJI Takashi (M.D., Ph.D.) from Okayama University describe how such exposure can indeed have detrimental effects on children's eyesight during later years.

The researchers used a national database of the Japan Government, based on the annual survey of all children born in the certain period of the year 2001. In 47,015 eligible children from the database over time, watching television or videos as a primary form of "play" and also daily duration of television-watching were assessed in the earlier years of life. The same children at elementary school were assessed yearly from the ages of 7 to 12 years to measure any concerns about visual acuity raised by their parents.

The Okayama University team first observed that if children had high television exposure at the ages of 1.5 years or 2.5 years, parents showed significant concerns around their children's eyesight in the second half of the study. This observation was consistent for children of both sexes and did not change based on parameters such as residential area or parents' education. Deeper analysis showed parents of children aged 2.5 years who watched television for greater than or equal to 2 hours/day had much greater concern for their children's visual acuity compared to those of children who watched television for up to 1 hour daily. However, as a child's age increased, their parent's concern during later years decreased.

To ensure uniformity of the results, the researchers re-analyzed the responses of a smaller pool of participants--those who participated in all surveys conducted when the children were between 7 to 12 years of age. Not only did the responses from this group reiterate their primary findings, but it was also found that the proportion of concerned parents increased as the children aged from 7 to 12 years. Visual acuity seems likely to deteriorate with age.

"This nationwide population-based longitudinal study is the first to demonstrate that television-watching only in the earlier years of life, but not in the later years, leads to the later consequence of visual acuity problems at elementary school age," conclude Professor MATSUO Toshihiko and Professor YORIFUJI Takashi.

Hence, carefully monitoring a child's television exposure up to the age of three could be a critical factor in healthy eyesight development. The research suggests that younger children should be encouraged to try more traditional ways of playing.

INFORMATION:

Background Visual Acuity and Japanese Social Systems - Visual acuity refers to the clarity or sharpness of one's vision. This is often distorted in conditions such as near-sightedness or far sightedness.

In Japan, children undergo a yearly eye exam at school after they turn 6 years old. These exams typically generate Grades A, B, C, or D which indicate a child's visual acuity (in decreasing order). The parents of children with mild-to-severe signs of impairment (Grades B to D) are then notified to follow-up with a formal eye check-up. Thus, parents have a close eye on their child's visual development from an early age and any concern over a child's eyesight is an accurate indicator of its visual health. Professor MATSUO Toshihiko and Professor YORIFUJI Takashi designed the outcomes of their study keeping this close relationship in mind.

Okayama University Medical Research Updates (OU-MRU) Full text: https://www.okayama-u.ac.jp/up_load_files/ebulletin-RUs/pdf/vol90.pdf
Website: https://www.okayama-u.ac.jp/eng/research_highlights/index_id135.html


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
OU-MRU: High levels of television exposure affect visual acuity in children

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

How injured nerves stop themselves from healing

2021-05-20
Nerves release a protein at the injury site that attracts growing nerve fibers and thus keeps them entrapped there. This prevents them from growing in the right direction to bridge the injury. The research team headed by Professor Dietmar Fischer reports in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) from 25. May 2021. There must be another cause Three main causes for the inability of injured nerves of the central nervous system, or CNS, to regenerate have been known to date: the insufficient activation of a regeneration program in injured nerve cells that stimulates the growth of fibers, so-called axons; the formation of a scar at the site ...

Deep learning enables dual screening for cancer and cardiovascular disease

2021-05-20
TROY, N.Y. -- Heart disease and cancer are the leading causes of death in the United States, and it's increasingly understood that they share common risk factors, including tobacco use, diet, blood pressure, and obesity. Thus, a diagnostic tool that could screen for cardiovascular disease while a patient is already being screened for cancer, has the potential to expedite a diagnosis, accelerate treatment, and improve patient outcomes. In research published today in Nature Communications, a team of engineers from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and clinicians from Massachusetts General Hospital developed a deep learning algorithm that can help assess a patient's risk of cardiovascular disease ...

Special issue on the COVID-19 pandemic

2021-05-20
Herndon, Va. (May 20, 2021) - The international journal Risk Analysis has published a timely special issue for May 2021, "Global Systemic Risk and Resilience for Novel Coronavirus and COVID-19." Featuring 11 papers written for this issue over the past year, the collection represents a sampling of insights and viewpoints from scholars across risk sciences and resilience analytics to guide decision-making and operations related to the COVID-19 pandemic. The 11 papers address the breadth of risk sciences represented by the Society for Risk Analysis (SRA), including risk perception, risk and resilience, human health and ...

Earthquake creates ecological opportunity

Earthquake creates ecological opportunity
2021-05-20
A University of Otago study has revealed how earthquake upheaval has affected New Zealand's coastal species. Lead author Dr Felix Vaux, of the Department of Zoology, says earthquakes are typically considered devastating events for people and the environment, but the positive opportunities that they can create for wildlife are often overlooked. For the Marsden-funded study, published in Journal of Phycology, the researchers sequenced DNA from 288 rimurapa/bull-kelp plants from 28 places across central New Zealand. "All specimens from the North Island were expected to be the species Durvillaea antarctica, but unexpectedly 10 samples from four sites were ...

Yellowstone National Park is hotter than ever

Yellowstone National Park is hotter than ever
2021-05-20
WASHINGTON--Yellowstone National Park is famous for harsh winters but a new study shows summers are also getting harsher, with August 2016 ranking as one of the hottest summers in the last 1,250 years. The new study drew upon samples of living and dead Engelmann spruce trees collected at high elevations in and around Yellowstone National Park to extend the record of maximum summer temperatures back centuries beyond instrumental records. The findings were published in Geophysical Research Letters, AGU's journal for high-impact, short-format reports with immediate implications spanning all Earth and space sciences. The ...

Study finds high-speed ferries, recreational boats are big noise polluters in SF Bay

Study finds high-speed ferries, recreational boats are big noise polluters in SF Bay
2021-05-20
Palo Alto, CA--In a new study, researchers found that recreational boats and high-speed ferries contribute significant underwater noise in San Francisco Bay, a highly urbanized coastline that is increasingly becoming a stop along the migratory routes of gray and humpback whales and home to bottlenose dolphins and harbor porpoises. The study is the first of its kind to use radar to track boats not broadcasting information through the Automatic Identification System (AIS), a navigation safety system required onboard large commercial ships. The findings add to the growing evidence that smaller vessels, ...

From mice to men: Study reveals potential new target for treating acute myeloid leukemia

From mice to men: Study reveals potential new target for treating acute myeloid leukemia
2021-05-20
Durham, NC -- Bone marrow failure due to acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a significant factor behind the disease's high rate of morbidity and mortality. Previous studies in mice suggest that AML cells inhibit healthy hematopoietic (blood) stem and progenitor cells (HSPC). A study released in STEM CELLS adds to this extent of knowledge by showing how secreted cell factors, in particular a protein called transforming growth factor beta 1 (TGFβ1), leads to a breakdown in the production of healthy blood cells (a process called hematopoiesis) in humans. The study's findings indicate that blocking TGFβ1 could improve ...

Medicare negotiation could save businesses $195 billion and workers another $98 billion

2021-05-20
WASHINGTON, DC - MAY 20, 2021 - As Congress considers legislation to reform prescription drug pricing, a new analysis conducted by the West Health Policy Center and released by its Council for Informed Drug Spending Analysis (CIDSA) estimates that the Elijah E. Cummings Lower Drug Costs Now Act (H.R. 3) could result in hundreds of billions of dollars in lower commercial health insurance costs by 2030.These savings would come from a $195 billion reduction in employer costs and $98 billion in savings for workers. The non-profit, non-partisan West Health Policy Center engaged the actuarial firm Milliman, to analyze the impact of the legislation on stakeholders. Using Milliman's analysis and other data sources West Health ...

Challenging the standard model of cancer

2021-05-20
In spite of decades of research, cancer remains an enigma. Conventional wisdom holds that cancer is driven by random mutations that create aberrant cells that run amok in the body. In a new paper published this week in the journal BioEssays, Arizona and Australian researchers challenge this model by proposing that cancer is a type of genetic throwback, that progresses via a series of reversions to ancestral forms of life. In contrast with the conventional model, the distinctive capabilities of cancer cells are not primarily generated by mutations, the researchers claim, but ...

Immune genetics and previous common cold infections might help protect Japan from COVID-19

Immune genetics and previous common cold infections might help protect Japan from COVID-19
2021-05-20
Protective immune memory--through B cells, which make antibodies, and/or T cells, which in the case of CD8+ T cells can kill virus-infected cells--can be induced by identical but also by related viruses. Related to the COVID-19 virus SARS-CoV-2, there are four common cold coronaviruses (CCCoVs) that together cause ~20% of common cold infections: OC43, HKU1, 229E, and NL63. Most adults have been infected with CCCoVs multiple times in their lives. Whether or not meaningful CCCoV-induced anti-SARS-CoV-2 neutralizing antibodies exist remains a matter of debate. Meanwhile, the generation of T cell memory should depend ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Fame itself may be critical factor in shortening singers’ lives

Daily coffee drinking may slow biological ageing of people with major mental illness

New highly efficient material turns motion into power – without toxic lead

The DEVILS in the details: New research reveals how the cosmic landscape impacts the galaxy lifecycle

After nearly 100 years, scientists may have detected dark matter

Gender imbalance hinders equitable environmental governance, say UN scientists

Six University of Tennessee faculty among world’s most highly cited researchers

A type of immune cell could hold a key to preventing scar tissue buildup in wounds

Mountains as water towers: New research highlights warming differences between high and low elevations

University of Tennessee secures $1 million NSF grant to build semiconductor workforce pipeline

Biochar shows powerful potential to build cleaner and more sustainable cities worldwide

UT Health San Antonio leads $4 million study on glucagon hormone’s role in diabetes, obesity

65-year-old framework challenged by modern research

AI tool helps visually impaired users ‘feel’ where objects are in real time

Collaborating minds think alike, processing information in similar ways in a shared task

Routine first trimester ultrasounds lead to earlier detection of fetal anomalies

Royal recognition for university’s dementia work

It’s a bird, it’s a drone, it’s both: AI tech monitors turkey behavior

Bormioli Luigi renews LionGlass deal with Penn State after successful trial run

Are developers prepared to control super-intelligent AI?

A step toward practical photonic quantum neural networks

Study identifies target for disease hyper progression after immunotherapy in kidney cancer

Concordia researchers identify key marker linking coronary artery disease to cognitive decline

HER2-targeted therapy shows promising results in rare bile duct cancers

Metabolic roots of memory loss

Clinical outcomes and in-hospital mortality rate following heart valve replacements at a tertiary-care hospital

Too sick to socialize: How the brain and immune system promote staying in bed

Seal milk more refined than breast milk

Veterans with cardiometabolic conditions face significant risk of dying during extreme heat events

How plants search for nutrients

[Press-News.org] OU-MRU: High levels of television exposure affect visual acuity in children
Okayama University Medical Research Updates (OU-MRU) Vol.90