Judith Lavrich, MD, and Jordan Hamburger outline findings from their research on virtual school and children's eye health.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, children were spending significantly more time looking at screens, said Judith Lavrich, MD, a clinical assistant professor at Thomas Jefferson University and ophthalmologist at Wills Eye Hospital Department of Pediatric Ophthalmology, and Jordan Hamburger, a fourth-year medical student at Sidney Kimmel Medical College at Thomas Jefferson University. Lavrich and Hamburger's study, "The Visual Consequences of Virtual School: Acute Eye Symptoms in Healthy Children," was presented at the American Academy of Ophthalmology's 2021 conference.
Transcript:
Can you introduce yourselves and explain the work you do?
Lavrich: My name is Judith Lavrich. I'm a clinical assistant professor at Thomas Jefferson University and Wills Eye Hospital Department of Pediatric Ophthalmology.
Hamburger: My name is Jordan Hamburger, I'm a fourth-year medical student at Sidney Kimmel Medical College at the Thomas Jefferson University.
How did you carry out your study on the visual consequences of virtual school and acute eye symptoms in healthy children? Can you explain the main findings?
Lavrich: Well, let me start with a background. During COVID-19, many pediatric ophthalmologists, including myself, and many of my colleagues from Wills Eye Hospital, were experiencing children coming in with many eye-related complaints. And these were healthy children that had started virtual school. In 30 years of my experience, I have never seen so many complaints from digital use previously. Digital use has been out there, but not to the extent that it was during COVID-19. So these children were spending significantly much more time on the digital screen. They were coming in with lots of eye complaints. So we decided to see if that was a reality and we decided to conduct a study to see if healthy kids were, in fact, having more complaints than normal. That's how we started this whole thing in the beginning. We wanted to answer whether the increased screen time was really the reason for the symptomatology increase. Jordan, I'll have you go ahead and describe the study.
Hamburger: Yeah, so we recruited over 110 healthy children from the community. We recruited them via social media, via pediatric ophthalmologist offices, and just also friends of families. All these students were enrolled in 1 day of virtual school per week at least. And we were able to assess their symptomatology from virtual school by giving them a survey before school and afterwards to see if there was any symptom increase from their virtual school time.
Lavrich: What we found from the study, we found surprising that over the course of 1 virtual school day, that ranged 3 to 10 hours, that we could detect the rise in significant eye symptoms. We found that 61% of healthy children had complaints directly related to their binocularity, or teaming of their vision, and 53% of healthy children had complaints related to ocular surface discomfort during the time of virtual school. It was also surprising to us that we found that the binocularity complaints were directly proportional to the amount of time spent on digital learning.
Balancing Cost and Quality in Oncology: A Value-Based Care Perspective
January 30th 2025Travis Brewer, vice president of payer and public health strategy/relations at Texas Oncology, shared that value-based oncology care can achieve both cost efficiency and high-quality outcomes through integrated multidisciplinary teams, flexible payment models, and targeted treatment approaches.
Read More
How FcRn Blockade Targets Myasthenia Gravis Autoantibodies
January 29th 2025In part 2 of our interview with Katie Abouzahr, MD, Johnson & Johnson Innovative Medicine, we discuss the challenge inherent in treating adolescents who have the myasthenia gravis and how nipocalimab works via FcRn blockade to reduce the circulating autoantibodies that drive myasthenia gravis.
Read More
Unlocking Access: Exploring Mental Health Care Among Medicaid Managed Care Enrollees
January 23rd 2025On this episode of Managed Care Cast, we speak with the author of a study published in the January 2025 issue of The American Journal of Managed Care® to examine the association between quantitative network adequacy standards and mental health care access among adult Medicaid enrollees.
Listen
An Argument for Outpatient Bispecific Antibody Delivery: Dr Kirollos Hanna
January 25th 2025Bispecific antibodies have altered the multiple myeloma (MM) treatment landscape, but some practices still lack enough familiarity with these therapeutics to deliver them in outpatient settings.
Read More