I Couldn’t See the Blackboard: A Childhood Story That Became a Mission to Stop Myopia

The Myopia Timebomb: A Preventable Childhood Vision Crisis We Can No Longer Ignore

A Preventable Childhood Vision Crisis We Can No Longer Ignore

Myopia is no longer a minor refractive inconvenience that can be corrected and forgotten. It is a rapidly accelerating, preventable public-health crisis — and one that is quietly reshaping the future of children’s vision across the UK and beyond.

In classrooms, children who cannot clearly see the board are too often told to “wait and see.” Prescriptions are updated. Frames are dispensed. And the underlying problem — progressive eye growth that increases the lifetime risk of serious sight-threatening disease — is left unchallenged.

In this powerful and unfiltered episode of The Optician Show, Garry Kousoulou sits down with award-recognised independent optometrist Mohamed Ayyaz Kasmani to confront what many still avoid saying out loud: childhood myopia is accelerating towards an epidemic, and doing nothing is no longer clinically or ethically acceptable.

The conversation begins with a deeply human story — a nine-year-old boy struggling to see the blackboard, heavy NHS frames left unworn, and a moment on safari where blurred vision permanently altered a child’s confidence and sense of possibility. That experience becomes the foundation for a career-long mission: not just correcting sight, but protecting it.

This episode goes far beyond lenses and prescriptions. Together, Garry and Ayyaz unpack why the traditional “wait and see” approach is failing, what modern myopia management actually involves, and why early intervention matters more now than ever before.

Because myopia isn’t just about seeing clearly today.
It’s about whether the next generation will be able to see tomorrow.

Why “Wait and See” Is Failing Children with Myopia

The Myopia Timebomb: Why Children Are Going Blind — and How Independent Optometrists Can Stop It

Myopia is no longer a minor refractive inconvenience. It is a global, preventable public-health crisis — and we are running out of time.

In this powerful and unfiltered episode of The Optician Show, Garry Kousoulou sits down with award-recognised independent optometrist Mohamed Ayyaz Kasmani to confront what many still avoid saying out loud: short-sightedness is accelerating towards an epidemic, and children are paying the price.

This conversation goes far beyond lenses and prescriptions.

It begins with a deeply human story — a nine-year-old boy unable to see the blackboard, heavy NHS frames left unworn, and a moment on safari where blurred vision changed a life forever. That personal experience becomes the foundation for a career-long mission: not just correcting sight, but protecting it.

Together, Garry and Ayyaz unpack why the traditional “wait and see” approach to childhood myopia is failing, and why doing nothing is no longer clinically or ethically acceptable. They explore the hard science behind eye growth, axial length, genetics, environmental factors, screen use, and the proven reality that high myopia dramatically increases lifetime risks of retinal detachment, glaucoma, cataract, and irreversible sight loss.

This episode explains — in plain, accessible language — what parents, practitioners, and educators urgently need to understand:

  • Why myopia progression is not inevitable

  • Why early intervention matters more than ever

  • Why simply updating prescriptions is not enough

  • Why prevention today saves vision — and healthcare costs — tomorrow

You’ll learn how modern myopia management actually works, including:

  • Orthokeratology, myopia-control spectacle lenses, and combination therapies

  • The role of axial length measurement and data-led monitoring

  • Why outdoor time, device habits, and education systems matter

  • The realities, myths, and safety considerations around low-dose atropine

But this is not just a clinical discussion — it’s a call to leadership.

Ayyaz speaks candidly about independence in optometry: the freedom to choose the right solution for the patient, not the easiest one for the system. Garry challenges the profession to recognise the difference between opportunity and opportunism, and to reclaim its role as a frontline defender of long-term eye health.

The episode also asks uncomfortable but necessary questions:

  • Why is myopia management still not recognised or funded properly?

  • Why are we investing billions in treating late-stage eye disease instead of preventing it?

  • And why, when we know better, are some children still being told to “come back in a year”?

If you are a parent, this episode will change how you see your child’s eyesight. If you are an optometrist or optical professional, it will challenge your protocols. If you care about public health, prevention, and the future of vision, this conversation matters.

Because myopia is not just about seeing clearly today. It’s about whether the next generation can see at all tomorrow.

🎧 Watch. Listen. Share. And be part of stopping the myopia time bomb.

 

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