Nearsightedness, or myopia, was twice as prevalent in the middle-income province of Shaanxi -- where students have greater access to books that require close-up focusing -- compared to the poorer neighbouring province of Gansu, said research in Ophthalmology, the journal of the American Academy of Ophthalmology.
Researchers said the findings are based on one of the largest population-based studies ever conducted on nearsightedness in children.
The scientific team included Chinese government agencies and universities and experts from Stanford University in California.
More than 9,400 students were in Shaanxi, and more than 10,100 students in Gansu, the second poorest province in China.
Nearly 23 per cent of youths in Shaanxi has clinically significant myopia, nearly twice that of the lower-income province of Gansu, which had a 12.7 per cent prevalence rate of myopia, said the findings.
"Living in the middle-class area was associated with a 69 per cent increased risk for nearsightedness, even after adjusting for other risk factors, such as time spent reading, outdoor activity and whether the student's parents wore glasses," said the study.
Girls were also more likely than boys to be nearsighted.
One idea researchers had is that the poorer schools' use of blackboards as a teaching tool may have had some protective effect against myopia, but this association disappeared when researchers controlled for other factors such as family history and outdoor play.
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