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man rubbing eyes after looking at a computer too long

How to Create the Optimal Work Environment to Reduce Digital Eye Strain

Eye strain slowing you down at work? Learn solutions to prevent computer vision syndrome, including glasses for computer use like blue light blocking glasses.

How to Create the Optimal Work Environment to Reduce Digital Eye Strain

Your job requires you to look at screens – perhaps multiple screens – a day for extended periods of time. From a desktop or laptop to your cell phone or tablet, your job must be completed via the use of digital, blue light-emitting devices.

And, as you may guess, you’re not alone.

According to the Vision Council, approximately 80 percent of American adults report using digital devices for more than two hours per day. On top of that, about 67 percent reported using two or more devices simultaneously.1

The result of all this use? 70 percent of adults report suffering from digital eye strain.2

While there is no way of avoiding staring at digital screens for the vast majority of your work week, there are multiple ways you can create an optimal work environment that not only reduces eye strain, but also helps your eyes achieve comfort while you work.

What is Digital Eye Strain, Exactly?

Digital Eye Strain – also known as Computer Vision Syndrome – is a condition that encompasses a group of eye and vision-related problems that develop from prolonged digital screen use, such as a computer, cell phone, e-reader, etc.

While Computer Vision Syndrome (CVS) is common and growing in occurrence among individuals of all ages, including children, it is treatable and preventable.

Generally speaking, the level of discomfort depends on an individual’s current eye health, visual abilities, and the amount of time spent looking at a digital screen. Overall,
CVS symptoms tend to increase with the amount of digital screen use.

Computer Vision Syndrome Symptoms & Causes

The most widely experienced symptoms associated with CVS are:

  • Blurred Vision
  • Eyestrain
  • Dry Eyes
  • Neck, Back and Shoulder Pain
  • Headaches

But what causes digital eye strain in the first place? Research has shown that CVS symptoms are most commonly caused by:3

  • Improper Viewing Distances
  • Poor Seating Posture
  • Poor Environment Lighting
  • Poor Screen Lighting
  • Glare on the Digital Screen
  • Uncorrected or Undetected Vision Issues, such as farsightedness, an astigmatism, presbyopia, inadequate eye focusing or coordination abilities, and more
  • A Combination of These Factors

Computer Vision Syndrome Can Be Prevented

Symptoms and causes of digital eye strain are usually only temporary and will cease after digital screen use has ended for an extended period of time. More importantly, CVS can be avoided in the workplace.

With the average American professional spending an average of seven hours a day on the computer,3 and a total of 10 hours a day on all digital devices,4 prevention techniques at the office can go a long way.

8 Ways to Prevent Computer Vision Syndrome & Achieve Eye Comfort While Working

To help alleviate or prevent digital eye strain altogether, turn the following steps into everyday habits:

1. Wear Glasses for Computer Use, such as Blue Light Blocking Glasses

Regardless if you already have a prescription for eyeglasses or contracts, it’s advantageous to discuss your options in glasses for computer use with your optometrist, including blue light blocking glasses.

Special computer glass lenses that have an anti-reflective coating and work to shield your eyes from harmful blue light can give your eyes the most amount of support.

Glasses for computer use:

  • Reduce screen glare
  • Help you avoid eye strain, eye fatigue, and general eye discomfort
  • Can deliver the best correction for intermediate and close-up distances from digital screens

2. Adjust Work Station Ergonomics

How far your computer screen is from your eyes plays a significant role in how much strain your eyes will experience.

In addition to adjusting your own posture, as this will help improve your overall comfort while working, be sure to arrange your desk so your computer screen is 18 to 30 inches (ideal range is 20 to 24 inches) away from your eyes.

Last of all, adjust the center of your screen to be approximately 10 to 15 degrees below your eyes. This will help your neck and head to rest at a more comfortable position.

3. Correct Office Lighting

A major culprit to digital eye strain is not in the digital device at all. If your work environment is extremely bright – due to overhead lighting and/or light coming through the windows – your eyes are probably overworking to adjust to surrounding light and the lighting from your digital device.

As a general rule, when using the computer, your office’s ambient lighting should be about half as bright as what is typically found in most offices. While this is largely out of your control, there are ways you can try to correct your office lighting, such as:

  • Closing drapes, shades or blinds to reduce or eliminate exterior light
  • Using fewer or lower intensity light bulbs or fluorescent tubes to reduce interior lighting
  • Turning off overhead fluorescent lights and using floor lamps that give off indirect incandescent or halogen lighting

4. Reduce Direct or Reflected Glares

In conjunction with correcting office lighting, you’ll want to be sure the steps you take are also reducing glare.

Glares appear when there is a high contrast between the intensity of light in the foreground and background.

You can reduce direct or reflected glare in your workspace by:

  • Completing all the steps for correcting office lighting
  • Positioning your computer monitor so the windows are off to the side
  • Changing office furniture and walls to neutral and dark colors to further reduce glare and reflection
  • Using an anti-glare screen filter on your computer screen

5. Change the Text Size and Color Combination on Your Computer

In addition to battling glare, screen flicker, and blue light, your eyes are trying to read small text and understand digital color combinations.

To help your eyes help you, adjust your text to be three times the smallest size you can read from a normal viewing position.

By also working to avoid low contrast text and background color schemes, your eyes won’t experience as much strain. Your eyes like the traditional dark-on-light combinations, such as black text on a white or slightly yellow background, so try to stick to that.

6. Prevent Dry Eyes

Another double-whammy to your eyes is viewing a digital screen for a long period of time while contending with dry eyes.

If you experience dry eyes at work, or know you live with persistent dry eyes, you can:

  • Use artificial tears
  • Blink more often
  • Lower the position of the computer monitor so more of the eye surface is covered by the eyelid because it is looking down
  • Increase the amount of water you consume to keep your eyes, and entire body, well hydrated

7. Follow the 20-20-20 Rule

Promoted by the American Optometric Association, the 20-20-20 rule is extremely simple and effective:

Take a 20-second break to view something 20 feet away every 20 minutes.

This exercise will give your eyes a break and help break up time spent staring at a digital screen. It will also give your mind some down time, too.

8. Schedule an Annual Eye Exam

With as much as you rely on your eyes, it’s imperative you get an annual, comprehensive vision exam to ensure your vision is in optimal condition and, if you are contending with any vision conditions, they can be detected early and treated with corrective solutions or preventative strategies.

As noted above, your optometrist can help ensure you get the right glasses for computer use, such as blue light blocking glasses, which has the potential to drastically reduce digital eye strain.

Protect Your Vision with Computer Vision Treatment

At iCare Vision, we take digital eye strain seriously. You can protect your eyes
and achieve comfortable vision while viewing your digital screens.

If you are experiencing any signs of digital eye strain, schedule a healthy eye exam for a quick and painless assessment. We can help you return to a productive workday with more comfortable eyes.

Resources:
1 The Vision Council. Digital Eye Strain. Accessed October 29, 2018. https://www.thevisioncouncil.org/content/digital-eye-strain.
2 NBC News. Read it and blink: 70 percent of adults report ‘digital eye strain’. Accessed October 29, 2018. https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/read-it-blink-70-percent-adults-report-digital-eye-strain-flna2D11883909.
3 American Optometric Association. Computer Vision Syndrome. Accessed October 30, 2018. https://www.aoa.org/patients-and-public/caring-for-your-vision/protecting-your-vision/computer-vision-syndrome.
4 CNN. Americans devote more than 10 hours a day to screen time, and growing. Accessed October 30, 2018. https://www.cnn.com/2016/06/30/health/americans-screen-time-nielsen/index.html.

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computer glasses to relieve digital eye strain

How Looking at Screens All Day is Affecting Your Eyesight

Digital eye strain is hurting your eyes and making you less productive. Learn ways to reduce this problem, including computer eye strain glasses.

How Looking at Screens All Day is Affecting Your Eyesight

Technology and digital screens walk hand-in-hand. As technology advances and more innovative, streamlined processes are implemented, our daily lives become inundated with digital screens.

While a digital world makes things more efficient and more exciting, our eyes are paying the price.

We Perform the Majority of Daily Tasks by Looking at a Screen

To highlight just how often we rely on our digital devices for day-to-day tasks, the Vision Council reports that:75.6 percent of Americans use a computer to conduct research

  • 56.6 percent of Americans use a smartphone as an alarm clock
  • 54.2 percent of Americans use a computer to shop
  • 53.7 percent of Americans use a smartphone to check the weather
  • 48.7 percent of Americans use a computer to find a recipe1

This doesn’t take into account how often individuals watch TV or use their smartphones for social media, text messages, and to take photos.

Think about how often you look at screens on a given day. Aside from using your phone and computer, you may curl up to read a good book on an e-reader, certain stores have transitioned to digital check out stations, new car models have digital touch screens for music and navigation, managing your health can be largely done on an exercise tracking device, and telling the time now requires looking at a small digital screen thanks to smart watches.

With so much screen time, our eyes are growing exhausted, becoming uncomfortable and dry, and delivering blurred vision. Our eyes are stressed for the majority of the day and most of us are beginning to experience the very real consequences associated with digital eye strain.

What is Digital Eye Strain?

Digital eye strain, also known as computer vision syndrome, refers to a group of eye and vision-related problems caused by frequent and prolonged periods of staring at digital screens.

Digital eye strain symptoms can vary from person-to-person, and largely depend on an individual’s digital screen use and habits. The most common symptoms are:

  • Dry eyes
  • Irritated eyes
  • Squinting
  • Blurred vision
  • Shoulder and neck stiffness
  • Headaches
  • Reduced attention span
  • Poor behavior
  • Irritability
  • Frustration
  • Much more

Digital eye strain develops because of the repetitive motion our eyes follow – typically a back and forth movement as you read – and the focusing efforts our eyes have to take to account for screen glare, blue light, contrast, and flicker.

Additionally, when viewing a screen (like working at a computer), then looking at papers on a desk, and then back to the screen, our eyes have an increasingly hard time re-adjusting so fast and so often.

With each movement, change in activity/object to view, and adjustment in lighting, your eyes have to react and send images to your brain for processing. Every movement takes a lot of effort from our eye muscles.

The longer your eyes are forced on screens with no support, digital eye strain gets worse. Furthermore, individuals who already live with eye issues are more likely to experience more intense digital eye strain issues.

Above all, it’s important to know that digital eye strain doesn’t just affect working professionals who sit at a computer all day. This eye issue affects 70% of Americans, including adults, teens and young children.

Digital Eye Strain Affects All Ages

Digital eye strain can develop after just two hours of digital screen use. According to a report compiled by The Vision Council, the following age groups say they regularly use digital devices for more than two hours per day:

  • 87.7 percent of Americans aged 18 to 39
  • 82.6 percent of Americans aged 40 to 59
  • 76.3 percent of Americans aged 60 and up1

For children under age 18:

  • 72 percent of Americans report their children spend more than two hours a day looking at a screen, such as a TV, iPad, smart phone, etc.
  • 30.1 percent of Americans report their children experience one or more digital eye strain symptoms1

Without question, digital eye strain is a serious issue plaguing the majority of Americans. Luckily, this eye issue can be prevented and treated.

Ways You Can Protect Your Eyes in an Increasingly Digital World

1. Wear Computer Glasses
For maximum protection and comfort when staring at a computer or digital screen for long periods of time, consider customized computer eye strain glasses.

Regardless if you wear eyeglasses or contacts already, it’s a great idea to schedule a comprehensive eye exam by a licensed optometrist to discuss your options in computer glasses and anti-glare glasses for computer and digital screen use.

Computer eye strain glasses are effective at protecting your eyes from harmful blue light and the refresh rates of digital screens. To give your eyes the most amount of support, computer glass lenses should have an anti-reflective coating to eliminate reflections of light that can cause eye strain.

2. Make small adjustments
Your eyes will benefit when you:

  • Increase the text size on all your devices so words are larger and easier to read
  • Reduce overhead lighting to reduce or remove all screen glare
  • Place your computer at arm’s length
  • Follow the 20–20–20 rule: Take a 20-second break from the screen every 20 minutes and look at something 20 feet away

3. Block Blue Light
Blue light is what emits from almost all digital screens. Blue light has a very short wavelength, so it produces a higher amount of energy. It’s also associated with more eye strain.

Blue light is what gives screens their brightness, and most digital displays need a lot of it.

For most devices today, there is a way to block blue light. For example, on Apple products, there is a setting called Night Shift that dims and shifts a digital screen display to a warmer orange light at night. Lower color temperatures on screens make for better long-term viewing comfort.

Where to Find the Right Pair of Computer Glasses for You

It’s easy to find inexpensive computer eye strain glasses over-the-counter, but to reap the full benefits of computer glasses, an accurate and customized eyeglass prescription is needed.

Schedule a healthy eye exam for a quick and painless assessment. Your optometrist can help you return to a productive workday with more comfortable eyes.

Resource:

1 The Vision Council. Digital Eye Strain. Accessed August 3, 2018. https://www.thevisioncouncil.org/content/digital-eye-strain.

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Protecting Your Eyes with Prescription Safety Glasses While at Work or Having Fun

Eye protection is critical. See what Dr. Wineland wears for eye protection & learn more about types of eyeglass lenses.

Protecting Your Eyes with Prescription Safety Glasses While at Work or Having Fun

Your life is bustling from one minute to the next with numerous endeavors that keep your eyes busy.

On any given day, your eyes must help you drive your car, complete work tasks, work in the yard, exercise, use power tools, pursue your hobby, read a book, and so much more.

From one activity to the next, how do you ensure your eyes are protected and supported? Do you have multiple pairs of glasses and safety glasses that provide protection to your eyes?

Keep in mind: Your standard eyeglasses may not be the best option for every occasion.

With specialty eyewear and prescription safety glasses – eyeglasses designed for specific tasks – you can safely see clearly no matter what you’re doing.

Learn more about the different types of eyeglass lenses:

Learn what Dr. Wineland wears for eye protection when he engages in varies activities by watching this short video:

We’re going to talk about eye safety today.

My kids used to call me Mr. Safety, and now I kind of like to think I am Dr. Safety in some ways.

Eye protection is critical. This helmet I am wearing is from when I used to play hockey with a full field facial protection. I think that is important, as you don’t want to take any chances with an eye injury (and concussions).

I want to show you the different types of sun and eyeglasses I have for eye protection.

  • I have the general protection glasses for things like weed whacking, using the chainsaw, and driving the tractor.
  • I have my regular eyeglasses, which are big, but they give my eyes a lot of protection.
  • I have my regular sunglasses. These give me a lot of protection and they’re polarized, too, and that gives me lot of extra help – especially looking into the water, about three to four feet. I’d like to think I am a better fisherman for that.
  • Finally, I have my shooter lenses for practicing marksmanship and trying to bring home a deer every once in a while.

Then I have equipment here that I use a lot – like the weed whacker, chainsaw and even a mallet or hammer. When using tools like these, it’s vital to always wear effective eye protection or prescription safety glasses.

It’s really important to have that safety.

Even seemingly ordinary events like walking through the woods demands some sort of eye protection. There are branches from trees that can hit us – and I’ve had to treat a lot of eye infections and injuries because of these reasons.

Be safe and you won’t be sorry!

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