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In the Fight Against Myopia, Stigma Is Scarier Than Rising Prescriptions

By VIVUE | Friday, September 5, 2025

As a frontline teacher with over a decade of experience helping deaf and hard-of-hearing kids with hearing rehabilitation, Ive told my studentsparents countless times: When a child wears hearing aids or a cochlear implant, its no different from us wearing glasses. Both are just ordinary assistive devices. We shouldnt treat these kids differentlywe need to truly accept that our child has a hearing difference.But one parent replied, You dont have a kid like thisyoull never really get how I feel.I froze. Its true: You cant fully empathize until you walk in someones shoes. It wasnt until my own child started wearing glasses that I realizedwhat many parents struggle to accept isnt just their childs condition, but the crushing weight of stigma.

My Wake-Up CallWhen My Kid Wore Glasses and Faced Judgment

The second my child put on glasses, every time we went out, strangers would point at their little frames and say:

 

Hes so young and already in glassesmust be on his phone too much, right?

Watching too much TV ruined his eyes, I bet.

 

I didnt understand the pain those hearing-impaired kidsparents felt until I faced that judgment myself.

 

Those thoughtless, off-the-cuff comments leave no space for the truth. We dont even own a TV, and my kid has never had unrestricted phone time. Every week, we spend a full day outdoors, hiking or playing in parksconnecting with nature, not screens. Yet a child raised this way still ended up nearsighted.

 

Strangers have never stepped foot in our home, never spent a minute with my kidbut they act like they know exactly what causedhis myopia. They jump to conclusions without a single fact. Thats stigma in action: an invisible force that clouds judgment and turns casual observers into critics.

Myopia Stigma Isnt UniqueIts Part of a Bigger Problem

The same unfair assumptions plague the deaf and hard-of-hearing kids in my class:

 

A genetic hearing difference gets twisted into bad luck from past generations.

A congenital condition gets blamed on something the mom did wrong during pregnancy.

 

People say these cruel things without a second thought. We spend so much time teaching parents to fight against stigma for hearing differencesyet we let that same stigma fester when it comes to myopia.

 

I finally get it now: All the well-meaning explanations in the world cant stand up to a thoughtless line like, It must be because you let him use screens too much.

 

Deep down, we often build invisible walls of stigmawalls that shut out anyone who seems different.These biases come from stereotypes, hearsay, or fear of the unknown. When we see someone who doesnt fit our normal,our first reaction is to resist, not accept; to doubt, not understand.

How to Break the StigmaOne Kind Comment at a Time

Stigma thrives when we stay silent, but it crumbles when we choose empathy. Heres how we can start:

 

Ditch assumptions about myopia: Myopia has complex causesgenetics, normal eye development changes, or heavy academic workloads (think endless homework, not just screens). You dont know a familys story, so dont guess.

Reframe how we talk about assistive devices: Glasses, hearing aids, cochlear implantstheyre not signs of a problem.Theyre tools that help kids thrive. Instead of pointing out whats different,celebrate what these tools enable: clear vision, the ability to hear a friends laugh.

Speak up with kindness: Next time you see a kid in glasses, kneel down and say something like, Those frames look cooldo you see rainbows in the lenses sometimes?When you meet a child with a cochlear implant, smile and say, Thats your special eardoes it help you hear your favorite songs?

 

We dont need grand gestures to fight stigma. We just need to stop building walls with doubt and start building bridges with understanding. When we do that, the divides created by prejudice will fadeand well see each other not for our differences,but for who we really are.

Final ThoughtStigma Hurts More Than Myopia Itself

Rising myopia rates are a public health concern, but stigma is a human one. It makes parents feel like failures, kids feel self-conscious, and communities grow more divided.

 

But stigma isnt permanent. It lives in the spaces between ignorance and empathyand we can choose to fill those spaces with kindness. The next time youre tempted to judge a child (or adult) for wearing glasses, hearing aids, or any assistive devicepause. Remember: You dont know their story. But you can choose to be part of a better oneone where difference is celebrated, not criticized.

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