It’s not just adults of a certain age complaining about their eyesight after more than a year of being glued to a:

💻 Laptop
🖥️ Desktop
📱 Mobile phone
📺 Large TV screen

Far more kids than before are coming in needing glasses, too trib.al/61PLLba
Myopia has been a growing concern during the Covid-19 pandemic, especially among children.

➡️ A study showed myopia in children ages 6 to 13 increased by up to three times in 2020
➡️ On average, children were more shortsighted trib.al/SSRFzpX
Myopia is the most common ocular disorder and a leading cause of visual impairment in children.

It is estimated to affect 52% of the world population by 2050.

👓 If you don’t have glasses now, you probably will soon trib.al/SSRFzpX
The largest decrease in spherical equivalent refraction, used to measure myopia, was found in six-year-olds.

Since older children were exposed to longer hours of screen time, this suggests younger eyes are more sensitive trib.al/SSRFzpX
Since myopia increases the risk of serious and costly eye disorders, it has significant implications for poorer regions and the developing world.

High myopia can cause serious retinal damage that can lead to blindness trib.al/SSRFzpX
For policy makers and educators weighing hybrid and remote learning, the impact on eyesight has to be considered.

⛅ The @WHO says there is evidence that spending time outdoors can reduce myopia or delay its onset trib.al/SSRFzpX
Although pandemic store closures hurt eyewear sales, more people now needing glasses or changing prescriptions in the wake of Covid-19 should reverse that trib.al/SSRFzpX
Do you want to stay lens-free or keep your myopia from worsening? Optometrists are fond of the 20-20-20 rule:

Every 20 minutes, take a 20-second break to view something 20 feet away trib.al/SSRFzpX

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More from @bopinion

14 Jun
At the start of the pandemic, headlines signaled the end of days for the Golden State: “California doom: Staggering $54 billion deficit looms,” the AP declared.

Yet that's not what the data shows. California’s economy is the opposite of doom trib.al/IFBEiqA
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Household income increased $164 billion, almost as much as Texas, Florida & Pennsylvania combined trib.al/IFBEiqA Image
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13 Jun
Theaters went dark in London’s West End last year, galleries closed and concert halls stood silent.

📚But there was one creative industry that flourished during lockdown: the reading and publishing of books
bloom.bg/3vlGUa4
Publishers, parents and educators are now hoping the reading habit will stick around post-Covid.

Here's why it just might:
📖@HarperCollins had a “historic” final quarter of 2020
📖Then it posted a 45% jump in profits in the quarter ending in March 2021 bloom.bg/3vlGUa4
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📚J. R. R. Tolkien
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12 Jun
💦 Planning to float around in your pool this summer? A shortage of chlorine tablets threatens to make that difficult trib.al/UjeOUhg
The chlorine squeeze is especially acute because Americans are more pool-happy than ever:

➡️ Demand for pool upgrades and new construction skyrocketed during the Covid-19 pandemic
➡️ Pool owners who didn’t do any extra work started using their pools more trib.al/UjeOUhg
The chlorine market likely would have been able to keep up were it not for a fire at a BioLab chemical plant last year.

The damage took out a facility responsible for a significant portion of the popular chlorine tablets produced for the U.S. market trib.al/UjeOUhg
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11 Jun
If we hear from an alien civilization, should we send a message back? Or stay silent?

This issue has stirred argument among scientists. But this really shouldn’t be a decision for scientists alone — the entire world should be involved trib.al/v6XJWAA
If alien civilizations exist, the chances we'll make contact are probably growing faster than ever before given advances in our ability to study planets orbiting other star systems, and to search with telescopes for signals indicating intelligent life trib.al/v6XJWAA
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But one day — next week, in a century, maybe longer — that may change trib.al/v6XJWAA
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10 Jun
The job market recovery is looking better for 2023 and 2024.

The best evidence for the optimistic outlook is coming from a surprising place: teenagers trib.al/UhfE1Ke
Teenagers are less affected by the factors holding back labor supply than any other demographic.

🚫They weren't eligible for economic impact payments while living at home
🚫They'd be ineligible for unemployment insurance as full-time students twitter.com/i/broadcasts/1…
A full employment recovery to pre-pandemic levels is going to take longer than we thought.

But booming employment trends among teenagers suggests that strong demand for workers should flow through into higher levels of labor-force participation teenagers trib.al/UhfE1Ke Image
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After fifteen months of isolation, lots of us are feeling some social anxiety about returning to the office.

But thankfully, it doesn’t need to be scary

trib.al/LYgJ1VG
A majority of U.S. workers would like to be in the office two or three days a week … eventually, according to most surveys.

Aside from a few notable Wall Street firms, there seems to be no rush to return trib.al/0O40xSg A picture of people working at dusk on various floors of the
The return-to-office anxiety is entirely understandable.

@DrAliceBoyes, author of “The Anxiety Toolkit” and a former clinical psychologist, has some advice: “Be patient with yourself” trib.al/0O40xSg A picture of production staff on the weekly fashion magazine
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