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Bowed their heads and tight stick the screen Beware of high myopia heredity of the next generation to lift your head!
Much of the 3 c products into their lives especially in intelligent mobile phone in the past two years show explosive growth portable convenience makes the notebook computer also gradually replaced so make many rely on the mobile phone addiction "down". Ophthalmologist said a long time with the result of the eye not only easy to let myopia deepen a few baidu and high myopia patients is likely to myopia passed on to the next generation!
High myopia is myopic degree more than 600 degrees these patients are usually long time focus on close work such as the 3 c product screen or book excessive use of the ciliary muscle of the eye make the ocular axial length increased lead to myopic degree is deepened fast. Now common to many teenagers or children get cell phone watch movies or playing online games.
Ophthalmologist Chen Yichuan pointed out that the development of the eyes can't afford to height in using load degree it is easy to soar high myopia rate observed in recent years schoolchildren continue to increase in addition to academic pressure is still heavy and often use the computer or mobile phone is also a reason. In addition if parents have already high myopia the next generation is also very prone to myopia genetic constitution.
Traditional treatment of high myopia will use the ciliary muscle relaxant and also is often said that the mydriatic agent. Excessive use of eye because work can lead to a temporary increase degree actually you can resume after the break use potions can be forced to relax ciliary muscle. But the use of mydriatic agent there may be other issues such as eye contact too much ultraviolet light during the day prone to photophobia symptoms pupil loose big will make elevated intraocular pressure may cause glaucoma. In addition there have some genetic constitution height myopia for a mydriatic agent effect is not obvious.
There are more and more people choose corneal shape the use of night sleep wear hard contact lenses to correct degree this kind of contact lens lens inside coils of different radian design. The patients sleep in the night time to wear the glasses can slowly to set the radian of corneal surface shape radian after the change of the cornea for people who often want to close your eyes also can prevent eye axis will not increase and replace the old order mydriatic agent achieve the goal of control myopia.
Chen Yichuan physician said usually 600 degrees myopia people wearing corneal shape lenses at least two weeks can achieve the result of the day does not need to wear glasses. Note that corneal shape lenses or should pay attention to cleaning and maintenance or like contact lenses will cause inflammation infection should be under the supervision of professional ophthalmologist fitting in order to ensure its safety and effectiveness.
Prevention of myopia good way or a correct habit including the correct posture his eyes from the book or the screen to 30 cm distance maintain the habit of 30 minutes to rest for at least 5 minutes can make the adjustment of the eye muscle rest adequately and sufficient sleep as much as possible don't stay up late to watch TV computer or mobile phone.
The furthest distance in the world is I in your side you are playing with mobile phones.
According to the survey 77% of people on 12 or more hours a day 33.55% of people on 24 hours 65% of people said: if the phone is not in the side will be very anxious.
This is a kind of disease! Bow "mobile phone" please leave some time each day to family and friends face to face talk!
And I think its no accident that we think this way. Neuroscientists have actually shown that human beings are hardwired to be optimists.
So maybe thats why we think of fear, sometimes, as a danger in and of itself. “Dont worry,” we like to say to one another. “Dont panic.” In English, fear is something we conquer. Its something we fight.
Its something we overcome. But what if we looked at fear in a fresh way? What if we thought of fear as an amazing act of the imagination, something that can be as profound and insightful as storytelling itself?
Its easiest to see this link between fear and the imagination in young children, whose fears are often extraordinarily vivid.
When I was a child, I lived in California, which is, you know, mostly a very nice place to live, but for me as a child, California could also be a little scary.
I remember how frightening it was to see the chandelier that hung above our dining table swing back and forth during every minor earthquake, and I sometimes couldnt sleep at night, terrified that the Big One might strike while we were sleeping.
And what we say about kids who have fears like that is that they have a vivid imagination. But at a certain point, most of us learn to leave these kinds of visions behind and grow up.
We learn that there are no monsters hiding under the bed, and not every earthquake brings buildings down. But maybe its no coincidence that some of our most creative minds fail to leave these kinds of fears behind as adults.
This year's four hundredth anniversary of the death of William Shakespeare is not just an opportunity to commemorate one of the greatest playwrights of all time. It is a moment to celebrate the extraordinary ongoing influence of a man who C to borrow from his own description of Julius Caesar C "doth bestride the narrow world like a Colossus."
Shakespeare's legacy is without parallel: his works translated into over 100 languages and studied by half the world's schoolchildren. As one of his contemporaries, Ben Jonson, said: "Shakespeare is not of an age, but for all time." He lives today in our language, our culture and society C and through his enduring influence on education.
Shakespeare played a critical role in shaping modern English and helping to make it the world's language. The first major dictionary compiled by Samuel Johnson drew on Shakespeare more than any other writer. Three thousand new words and phrases all first appeared in print in Shakespeare's plays. I remember from my own childhood how many of them are found for the first time in Henry V. Words like dishearten, divest, addiction, motionless, leapfrog C and phrases like "once more unto the breach", "band of brothers" and "heart of gold" C have all passed into our language today with no need to reference their original context. Shakespeare also pioneered innovative use of grammatical form and structure C including verse without rhymes, superlatives and the connecting of existing words to make new words, like bloodstained C while the pre-eminence of his plays also did much to standardise spelling and grammar.
But Shakespeare's influence is felt far beyond our language. His words, his plots and his characters continue to inspire much of our culture and wider society. Nelson Mandela, while a prisoner on Robben Island, cherished a quote from Julius Caesar which said "Cowards die many times before their death, the valiant never taste of death but once." While Kate Tempest's poem "My Shakespeare" captures the eternal presence of Shakespeare when she wrote that Shakespeare "…is in every lover who ever stood alone beneath a window…every jealous whispered word and every ghost that will not rest." Shakespeare's influence is everywhere, from Dickens and Goethe to Tchaikovsky, Verdi and Brahms; from West Side Story to the Hamlet-inspired title of Agatha Christie's "The Mousetrap" C the longest-running theatre production in London's West End today. While his original plays continue to entertain millions C from school halls across the world to the overnight queues as hundreds scrambled for last minute tickets to see Benedict Cumberbatch playing Hamlet at London's Barbican last year.
But perhaps one of the most exciting legacies of Shakespeare is his capacity to educate. As we see from the outreach work of the Royal Shakespeare Company and Shakespeare's Globe and the impact of pioneering British charities like the Shakespeare Schools Festival, studying and performing Shakespeare can help improve literacy, confidence and wider educational attainment.
Every day throughout 2016, Britain is inviting you to join us in celebrating the life and legacy of William Shakespeare. On 5 January, Twelfth Night, we launched "Shakespeare Lives" C an exciting global programme of activity and events to highlight his enduring influence and extend the use of Shakespeare as an educational resource to advance literacy around the world.
The programme will run in more than seventy countries, led by the British Council and the Great Britain campaign. You can share your favourite moment of Shakespeare on social media, watch never-before-seen performances on stage, film and online, visit exhibitions, take part in workshops and debates, and access new Shakespearean educational resources to get to grips with the English language.
The Royal Shakespeare Company will tour China; Shakespeare's Globe will perform across the world from Iraq to Denmark. Young people will reimagine Shakespeare in Zimbabwe. A social media campaign called "Play your Part" (#PlayYourPart) will invite the next generation of creative talent to produce their own digital tribute to the Bard C and, in partnership with the British charity Voluntary Services Overseas, we will raise awareness of the huge challenge of global child illiteracy and use Shakespeare to increase educational opportunities for children around the world.
Beyond the great gift of language, the bringing to life of our history, his ongoing influence on our culture and his ability to educate, there is just the immense power of Shakespeare to inspire. From the most famous love story to the greatest tragedy; from the most powerful fantasy to the wittiest comedy; and from the most memorable speeches to his many legendary characters, in William Shakespeare we have one man, whose vast imagination, boundless creativity and instinct for humanity encompasses the whole of the human experience as no one has before or since.
So, however you choose to play your part, please join us in 2016 in this unique opportunity to celebrate the life and enduring legacy of this man; ensuring that, as he himself put it, "all the world's a stage" and that through his legacy, truly, Shakespeare Lives.