Advertisement

Cutting-edge glasses for short-sighted children under project from Hong Kong Polytechnic University

  • Project provides screening and patented, award-winning lens technology for poor children
  • It is a boost for city’s poorer families, who could struggle with the high cost of specialised specs

Reading Time:4 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
As part of the PolyU-HKIF Children Eye Care Project, Huang Ho-yan will get regular visual screening. Photo: Tory Ho

Ten-year-old schoolgirl Huang Ho-yan’s mother felt hopeless when she found out a pair of corrective glasses for her daughter’s short-sightedness would set her back nearly HK$4,000 (US$511), when the family of four lives on her husband’s monthly salary of some HK$10,000.

Advertisement

The housewife, who wished to be known only as Mrs Huang, said she could not sleep when Ho-yan’s myopia was found to have worsened to 350 degrees in April, from 150 degrees two years ago.

“I could see the blackboard clearly without wearing glasses from my seat on the front row two years ago, but this year I couldn’t read anything on the board from the last row, even with my glasses on,” Ho-yan says.

“It worsened so fast,” Mrs Huang says. “I kept looking for solutions online at night and learned that some special lenses can help slow it down.

“But when I called the optical shops, they quoted HK$3,000 for the lenses and HK$500 to HK$600 for the frame.”

Advertisement
Advertisement