Cultural roots of the myopia boom in Confucian Asia and their implications.

IF 2.3 3区 医学 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Fabian Yii
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Current evidence implicates educational pressures and reduced outdoor time as major causes of myopia. This paper examines the ongoing battle against the myopia epidemic in East Asia, including its cultural offshoots such as Singapore, where over 80% of young adults are myopic. East Asian societies share deeply rooted Confucian values that attach great importance to education and familial obligations, with heavy parental investment in education and the perception that academic excellence reflects filial piety. Coupled with a strong emphasis on standardised test results, East Asian children face intense educational pressures from a young age. Existing education-based myopia prevention strategies focus either on top-down school reforms to promote more outdoor time for students during school hours or on bottom-up awareness initiatives encouraging lifestyle changes. However, the entrenched Confucian worldview suggests that more extensive top-down reforms aimed at reducing competition in education, combined with widespread bottom-up awareness initiatives targeting the public-particularly parents, given their active involvement in children's education outside of school-may be required to truly turn the tide on myopia.

儒教亚洲近视热的文化根源及其影响。
目前的证据表明,教育压力和户外活动时间减少是造成近视的主要原因。本文探讨了东亚地区正在进行的抗击近视流行病的斗争,包括其文化分支,如新加坡,那里 80% 以上的年轻人都是近视眼。东亚社会有着根深蒂固的儒家价值观,非常重视教育和家庭义务,父母在教育方面投入巨大,认为学业优秀体现了孝道。再加上对标准化考试成绩的高度重视,东亚儿童从小就面临着巨大的教育压力。现有的以教育为基础的近视预防策略要么侧重于自上而下的学校改革,促进学生在校期间有更多的户外活动时间,要么侧重于自下而上的宣传活动,鼓励改变生活方式。然而,根深蒂固的儒家世界观表明,要真正扭转近视的趋势,可能需要进行更广泛的自上而下的改革,以减少教育竞争,同时针对公众(尤其是家长,因为他们积极参与孩子的校外教育)开展广泛的自下而上的宣传活动。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Public Health Policy
Journal of Public Health Policy 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
5.70
自引率
2.60%
发文量
62
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Public Health Policy (JPHP) will continue its 35 year tradition: an accessible source of scholarly articles on the epidemiologic and social foundations of public health policy, rigorously edited, and progressive. JPHP aims to create a more inclusive public health policy dialogue, within nations and among them. It broadens public health policy debates beyond the ''health system'' to examine all forces and environments that impinge on the health of populations. It provides an exciting platform for airing controversy and framing policy debates - honing policies to solve new problems and unresolved old ones. JPHP welcomes unsolicited original scientific and policy contributions on all public health topics. New authors are particularly encouraged to enter debates about how to improve the health of populations and reduce health disparities.
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