Over the last 30 years, myopia has become a global health problem. The most dramatic rise has been in Singapore, Taiwan, China and elsewhere in East Asia, researchers said.
Rates can be as high as 80-90 per cent among children leaving secondary schools in the region.
The cause of myopia, and the means to prevent it, are unclear despite more than 150 years of scientific research.
Many theories have been put forward to explain why children's eyesight gets worse as they go through school. Too much close work is one of the more popular ones, while heredity is another.
During the 17th century, rickets was common among children in England and then reached epidemic levels through northern Europe and North America.
In some cities, 80 per cent of children were affected. The remedy proved elusive until the 1920s, when scientists found that a lack of sunlight, resulting in vitamin D deficiency, was the cause of rickets.
Myopia, like rickets, is a seasonal condition which seems to get worse in the winter. Recent research on myopia has revived an old theory from the 1890s, that school children who spend more time outdoors have lower levels of myopia.
Hobday said that a century ago, it was widely believed that high daylight levels in schools could prevent myopia.
Education departments built classrooms with large windows to try to stop children becoming short-sighted. Then in 1960s, medical thinking changed. Myopia was thought to be an inherited condition; so less was done to prevent it, Hobday said.
Today, it is known that children's education has a far greater impact on their sight than genetic factors, Hobday said.
"It has not been investigated properly since the connection was first made in the 1860s. But, given the rapid increase in myopia among school children worldwide, this should be revisited," Hobday said.
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