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

Air pollution is harming children’s eyesight - study

Exposure to lower levels of air pollutants is linked to how well children can see without glasses

2025-09-23
(Press-News.org) Air pollution may be harming children’s eyesight with cleaner air helping to protect and even improve their vision - especially in younger children, a new study reveals.

Researchers have discovered that exposure to lower levels of air pollutants - specifically nitrogen dioxide (NO₂) and fine particulate matter (PM2.5) - is associated with how well children can see without glasses.

Their findings suggest that reducing exposure to these pollutants could help slow the progression of myopia or short-sightedness - when distant objects appear blurry. The condition is becoming more common in children, especially in East Asia.

Publishing their findings in PNAS Nexus today (23 Sep), the experts note that, while genetics and lifestyle factors - such as screen time on electronic devices - play a major part in whether children have myopia, environmental factors such as air pollution also matter.

Using advanced machine learning techniques, the team examined how environmental, genetic, and lifestyle factors interact to influence children’s vision development. The researchers discovered that children who lived in areas with cleaner air had better vision, after accounting for other factors.

They found that primary school students are especially sensitive to air pollution. These younger children showed the greatest improvements in uncorrected visual acuity when exposed to cleaner air.

In contrast, older students and those with high myopia were less affected by environmental changes, with their vision more strongly influenced by genetic factors - suggesting that early action—before vision problems become severe—can make a real difference.

Professor Zongbo Shi, from the University of Birmingham, who co-supervised this study, commented: “While genetics and screen time are long recognised as contributors to childhood myopia, this study is among the first to isolate air pollution as a meaningful and modifiable risk factor.

“Clean air isn’t just about respiratory health—it’s about visual health too. Our results show that improving air quality could be a valuable strategic intervention to protect children’s eyesight, especially during their most vulnerable developmental years.”

Polluted air can cause inflammation and stress in the eyes, reduce sunlight exposure - which is important for healthy eye development, and trigger chemical changes in the eye that lead to it changing shape, causing myopia.

This study suggests that installing air purifiers in classrooms, creating “clean-air zones” around schools to reduce traffic pollution, and closing streets to cars during school drop-off and pick-up times have the potential to improve eye health because children spend a lot of time at school.

Co-author Dr Yuqing Dai, from the University of Birmingham, commented: “Myopia is on the rise globally, and it can lead to serious eye problems later in life. While we can’t change a child’s genes, we can improve their environment. If we act early—before severe myopia sets in—we can make a real difference.”

ENDS

For more information, interviews, or an embargoed copy of the research paper, please contact the University of Birmingham press office on pressoffice@contacts.bham.ac.uk or +44 (0) 121 414 2772.

Notes to Editors

The University of Birmingham is ranked amongst the world’s top 100 institutions, its work brings people from across the world to Birmingham, including researchers and teachers and more than 8,000 international students from over 150 countries. 'Benefits of Clean Air for School Children’s Vision Health' - Xi Chen,Yuqing Dai, Ruihua Wei, BEI DU, Congchao Lu, A. MacKenzie, Nai-jun Tang, Zongbo Shi, and Hua Yan is published by PNAS Nexus. Participating institutions: University of Birmingham, Tianjin Medical University Eye Hospital, Tianjin Medical University Eye Hospital, Congchao Lu, and Tianjin Medical University General Hospital. END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Study of glaciers in the Andes sheds light on future climate impact

2025-09-23
Andean glaciers advanced during an acute period of climate change at the end of the last Ice Age, new research has found. An international team of glaciologists, led by Aberystwyth University, made the discovery as part of a new project into tropical glaciers in Peru. The finding challenges long-held assumptions about glacier behaviour during this period. The findings, published in Scientific Reports, shed new light on how glaciers respond to shifting climate patterns and may help improve predictions of future climate impacts. The study focused on the Younger Dryas period, a time of sudden and dramatic climate change that occurred approximately 12,900 ...

Climate change could erase 80% of whitebark pine’s current habitat across the Rockies and Northwest 

2025-09-23
A new study, led by federal agencies in collaboration with the University of Colorado Denver, shows that the whitebark pine tree—an iconic, high-elevation tree that stretches from California’s Sierra Nevada through the Cascades and Rockies and into Canada—could lose as much as 80 percent of its habitat to climate change in the next 25 years.   The loss could have a cascade of effects, impacting wildlife and people.  The threatened whitebark pine tree is a crucial food source for squirrels and grizzly bears. It also acts as a natural snow ...

FAU engineers develop smarter AI to redefine control in complex systems

2025-09-23
A new artificial intelligence breakthrough developed by researchers in the College of Engineering and Computer Science at Florida Atlantic University offers a smarter, more efficient way to manage complex systems that rely on multiple decision-makers operating at different levels of authority. This novel framework, recently published in IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man and Cybernetics: Systems, could significantly impact the future of smart energy grids, traffic networks and autonomous vehicle systems – technologies that are becoming increasingly central to daily life. In many real-world systems, decisions ...

Meditation to treat depression and gaming addiction

2025-09-23
Mindfulness meditation may help people struggling with concurrent depression and Internet gaming disorder, according to a study. Guang-Heng Dong and colleagues treated 59 people with depression and Internet gaming disorder (IGD)—which is characterized by excessive and dysregulated video game playing. About a third of people struggling with IGD also suffer from depression. For some, gaming becomes the only way to feel pleasure in an otherwise painful or colorless world. Of the 59 participants, 27 engaged in progressive muscle relaxation ...

Predicting evolution in cell populations with a scaling law

2025-09-23
A scaling law relates the expected number of mutants to the total population size of cells in a spatially constrained but growing population, which could help clinicians predict when cancers or bacterial infections might develop resistance to treatment. Given a small number of cells in a population subject to a strong fitness pressure, such as a drug intended to kill the cells, mutations are likely to arise. However, it is difficult to predict when those mutations might arise and become common in ...

Beyond the Spread: A Scientific Playbook for Forex Execution and Risk

2025-09-23
Foreign exchange (FX) is often described as the world’s deepest and most liquid marketplace, but beneath the headline numbers lies a complex microstructure that shapes how prices form, how liquidity concentrates, and how risk truly behaves across time. At its core, forex is a decentralized, quote-driven market where tiered participants—interbank dealers, non-bank liquidity providers, prime brokers, hedge funds, corporates, and retail aggregators—interact across electronic communication networks and single-dealer platforms. Price discovery unfolds through a constant negotiation of bid–ask quotes, with top-of-book spreads reflecting not only raw competition among market makers but also inventory constraints, latency advantages, and anticipated information flow.

A new comprehensive safety assessment framework for liquid hydrogen storage systems in UAVs

2025-09-23
Aviation accounts for approximately 12% of global carbon dioxide emissions. With intensifying climate change and environmental issues, the aviation industry is searching for greener propulsion systems. For unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), which have wide applications in military, logistics, and agriculture, research has turned towards hydrogen propulsion systems. Hydrogen is a clean fuel that produces only water during combustion, representing a promising alternative to conventional fossil fuels. However, hydrogen has low volumetric energy density, meaning larger volumes are required to produce the same energy as conventional ...

Study: 72% of Illinois wetlands no longer protected by federal Clean Water Act

2025-09-23
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Illinois once harbored more than 8 million acres of wetlands. By the 1980s, all but 1.2 million wetland acres had been lost, filled in for development or drained to make way for agriculture. Now, thanks to a 2023 Supreme Court decision, roughly 72% of the remaining 981,000 acres of Illinois wetlands are no longer protected by the federal Clean Water Act, putting communities at risk of losing the flood control, groundwater recharge, water purification and natural habitat these wetlands provide, researchers report. A patchwork of state and county-level wetland regulations offer some protection ...

More than a reflex: How the spine shapes sex

2025-09-23
For decades, it was thought that while the brain orchestrated male sexual behaviour – arousal, courtship, and copulation – the spinal cord merely executed the final act: ejaculation. But a study from the Champalimaud Foundation (CF) challenges that tidy division. It reveals that a key spinal circuit is not only involved in ejaculation but also in arousal and shaping the choreography of sex, adding a surprising new dimension to our understanding of sexual behaviour in mammals. “The spinal cord isn’t just a passive relay station executing brain commands”, says Susana Lima, Principal Investigator of CF’s ...

Famous IVF memoir had hidden ghostwriter who spun breakthrough into emotional quest, archives reveal

2025-09-23
Previously unseen documents show how a poet performed a major ghostwriting job on the autobiography of the two British pioneers behind the world’s first “test-tube baby”, so that the book used emotional storytelling to aid public acceptance of a controversial medical technology. A Matter of Life, coauthored in 1980 by geneticist Robert Edwards – who spent much of his career at Cambridge and went on to win the Nobel Prize – and gynaecologist Patrick Steptoe, tells how their research led to in vitro fertilisation (IVF). The book is the basis ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New open-source American College of Lifestyle Medicine program brings culinary skills and nutrition education into medicine

AI tool identifies women at high risk of interval breast cancer

USF study: AI and citizen science reveal potential first detection of invasive malaria mosquito in Madagascar

American Pediatric Society honors Dr. Bruce D. Gelb with 2026 APS John Howland Award

Leveraging COVID-19 lessons to prepare for the next pandemic

Mount Sinai awarded $4.5M BD2 grant to advance research on the biology of bipolar disorder

Global initiative to demonstrate operational excellence in Nigeria for metastatic colorectal cancer patients

AI produces shallower knowledge than web search

New study shows global decline in parental trust in childhood vaccines after COVID-19, contributing to increased measles outbreaks

BD² awards $18 million in grants to advance research on the biology of bipolar disorder

Opt-out organ donation policies might reduce organ supply

Message from the oldest-living dogs to dogs and men: Gonad function fights frailty

Distinct brain features in football players may tell who is at risk of long-term traumatic disease

Identifying safer implant designs for total hip replacement

Study reveals clinical frailty scale as a quick predictor of patient risk after heart failure administration

Game-changing heat shield to revolutionize aerospace manufacturing with long-life engines

Pusan National University researchers show how AI can help in fashion trend prediction

Sinking Indian megacities pose 'alarming' building damage risks

Cul-de-sac effect: Why Mediterranean regions are becoming more prone to extreme floods in a changing climate

Now in 3D, maps begin to bring exoplanets into focus

Researchers develop an ultrasound probe capable of imaging an entire organ in 4D

Oxygen deprivation heightens risk of illness by changing genes

Missing nutrient in breast milk may explain health challenges in children of women with HIV

Custom-designed receptors boost cancer-fighting T cells

Polar bears act as crucial providers for Arctic species

Body clocks matter for heart health

Crystal-free mechanoluminescence illuminates new possibilities for next-generation materials

Scientists develop an efficient method of producing proteins from E. coli

AAAS announces addition of Cancer Communications to Science Partner Journal Program

Systematic review reveals psilocybin reduces obsessive-compulsive behaviors across clinical and preclinical evidence

[Press-News.org] Air pollution is harming children’s eyesight - study
Exposure to lower levels of air pollutants is linked to how well children can see without glasses