Consider this: approximately 80% of everything a child learns in the classroom is acquired through vision. Reading, writing, copying from the board, recognising letters and numbers, learning hand-eye coordination for sports — all are fundamentally visual tasks. A child with uncorrected vision problems does not just have a "sight problem" — they have a learning problem, a confidence problem, and a developmental problem that compounds with every year the condition goes undetected.
In Punjab, where academic competition is intense and parents invest enormously in their children's education, the irony is that a simple, correctable refractive error may be the hidden barrier preventing a bright child from achieving their potential. At Brar Eye Hospital, our paediatric ophthalmology department sees this pattern regularly — children labelled as "slow learners" or "inattentive" who, once fitted with glasses for the first time, transform academically and socially within weeks.
Children rarely complain about poor vision because they don't know what "normal" vision looks like. They have never experienced it. This guide helps every Punjab parent understand their child's visual development milestones, recognize warning signs, and ensure their children receive the eye care they need at the right age.
Understanding normal visual development helps parents recognize when something is wrong:
Children rarely say "I can't see well." Instead, watch for these behavioural clues:
Myopia is the most common refractive error in school-age children worldwide — and it's increasing at alarming rates in India and Punjab. A myopic child sees clearly up close but blurrily in the distance. The classic sign: sitting close to the TV or squinting at the classroom board while peers can see clearly.
Myopia is driven by a combination of genetics (both myopic parents = 6× higher risk for the child) and environmental factors — primarily excessive near work (reading, screens) and insufficient outdoor time. Studies consistently show that 2+ hours of outdoor activity daily significantly protects against myopia development and slows progression in children who are already myopic — outdoor light stimulates dopamine release in the retina, which inhibits excessive eye growth.
Myopia is not just a glasses issue — high myopia (above -6.00D) significantly increases lifetime risk of retinal detachment, glaucoma, and myopic macular degeneration. Myopia control — slowing the rate of prescription increase in children — is an active area of treatment at Brar Eye Hospital, including orthokeratology (overnight corneal reshaping lenses), low-dose atropine drops, and multifocal soft contact lenses.
Young children are naturally mildly hyperopic (farsighted) — the young eye compensates using accommodation (focusing effort). However, moderate to high hyperopia causes symptoms: frontal headaches after reading, avoidance of close work, and in young children, can cause the eye to turn inward (accommodative esotropia — a form of convergent squint). Glasses for hyperopia in children are often needed full-time to allow the visual system to develop normally.
Caused by unequal curvature of the cornea or lens, astigmatism blurs vision at all distances — like looking through a warped or cylindrical glass. Children with significant uncorrected astigmatism often complain of headaches, tired eyes after reading, and have blurry, slightly distorted vision. Astigmatism is common (affects 28–33% of Indian schoolchildren) and easily corrected with glasses.
Amblyopia is reduced vision in one (occasionally both) eye(s) that cannot be fully corrected with glasses because the brain, during visual development, has suppressed or not fully developed the neural connections for that eye. It affects approximately 2–4% of children and is the most common cause of unilateral vision impairment in children and young adults.
Causes include: uncorrected significant refractive error in one eye (anisometropic amblyopia), squint/strabismus (suppression of the deviated eye), and visual deprivation (e.g., congenital cataract blocking vision in infancy).
Treatment: The affected eye must be forced to work by patching (covering) the good eye for several hours daily, or using atropine drops to blur the good eye (penalisation). Early treatment (before age 7–8 — the critical period) yields best results. Compliance with patching is the single biggest challenge — explain to children that it is essential and make it a positive, fun part of the day.
Strabismus is misalignment of the eyes — one eye points inward (esotropia), outward (exotropia), upward (hypertropia), or downward (hypotropia). In young children, strabismus is never normal after 4 months of age. Causes: uncorrected hyperopia (accommodative esotropia), neurological conditions, cataract or poor vision in one eye, or idiopathic (unknown cause).
Treatment depends on cause: glasses alone for accommodative esotropia; patching for associated amblyopia; surgical correction of the extraocular muscles for residual or non-accommodative strabismus. The goal of strabismus treatment is both cosmetic (straight eyes) and functional (binocular vision and depth perception).
As discussed in our cataracts guide, congenital cataracts in infants must be treated as an emergency — surgical removal within weeks of diagnosis, followed by immediate optical correction and amblyopia treatment. Any cloudy pupil in a newborn requires urgent ophthalmological evaluation. The leukocoria (white pupillary reflex) visible in photographs with flash — where one eye shows a white glow instead of the normal red — must always be investigated urgently.
Commonly called "colour blindness" — though complete inability to see colour is extremely rare. Colour vision deficiency (CVD) is the inability to distinguish certain colours, most commonly red-green. It affects approximately 8% of males and 0.5% of females. CVD is inherited (X-linked) and cannot be cured. However, early identification is important — children with CVD need teachers and parents to be aware, and certain career paths (aviation, military, some medical specialties) have colour vision requirements. Simple colour vision testing at school age allows appropriate guidance.
The post-COVID era has dramatically increased children's screen time — online classes, YouTube, gaming, and social media now occupy hours of each child's day. Prolonged near screen work is a significant driver of myopia progression. Practical recommendations for Punjab families:
Don't wait for school failure or complaints. Book a comprehensive paediatric eye exam at Brar Eye Hospital Punjab.