If your child''s vision is deteriorating rapidly, beyond simply increasing glasses prescription, there are ways to slow myopia progression. Cheonan Kim Eye Clinic''s pediatric department manages children''s myopia with three methods: orthokeratology (ortho-K), MiSight contact lenses, and low-dose atropine eye drops.
At a glance
| Ortho-K (Dream Lens) | MiSight (1day multifocal) | Atropine 0.05% | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wear time | Overnight only | Daytime only | One drop at bedtime |
| Min. age | 6+ | 8+ | 4+ |
| Daily care | Lens cleaning | Disposable 1day | Drop only |
| Myopia progression | ~50% reduction | ~59% reduction | ~50% reduction |
| Parent effort | Hygiene, fitting help | Simplest | Simplest |
| Diopter range | Within 6D | Wide | All ranges |
Parent self-check
- Watches TV or reads at very close distance
- Frequently rubs or squints eyes
- Glasses prescription rose 0.5D+ in 6 months
- Both parents are myopic
- Increasing difference between two eyes
- Long study hours, little outdoor time
If two or more apply, consider a screening visit.
Which method fits your child
- Active child uncomfortable with glasses → Ortho-K
- Hygiene management difficult, very young → Atropine drops
- Dislikes daily lens cleaning → MiSight (1day) or Atropine
- Rapid progression → Ortho-K + Atropine combination
Our pediatric care
- Non-contact infant exam equipment for uncooperative children
- Regular vision tracking and progression rate measurement
- All three options available, matched to lifestyle and prescription
