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Category: Staying healthy

Avoid red and sore eyes computer monitor problems

2 July, 2007 (02:22) | Staying healthy

A bit of an unusual post by me, but I want to share my experiences regarding this topic.

About 7 years ago I had problems with my eyes that had grown so big I was unable to work in front of a computer screen more than 10 minutes at a time. My eyes would simply explode and all the white in them would become red. Then that happened my eyes would also become sore. It had become a vicious circle and at the time many eyes doctors were clueless and had failed to read up on common symptoms among IT people who work many hours each day behind a computer. Luckily I finally found an eye doctor that was of some help, and managed through experimentation to get my red eyes problem under control.

In the years following I tried a number of things. Some of these worked wonders. This is my own “as-is” personal list of tips and tricks to reduce problems with red and sore eyes:

  • Consult with an eye doctor if you experience problems with red eyes.
  • Get tear eye drops with no preservation additions. Usually that means one day dosis containers.
  • Get eyedrops against allergy, again unpreserved like the tear drops.
  • Make sure you do not expose you eyes to direct lighting. Experiment with slightly dimmed soft whole-room lighting.
  • Turn down contrast and light on computer screen.
  • Avoid reflections. Check your monitor, windows, glass frames etc. Avoid, dim and defocus all light reflection sources as much as possible.
  • Remember to blink with your eyes. Studies have shown those that work and read much at computer screens blink less, which in return dries the eyes.
  • Be aware of the room temperature. Computers can warm small rooms very quickly, and this can really worsen eye irritation.
  • Force some pauses into your work. Chat with colleagues, sort papers or whatever.
  • Use modern “flat screen” TFT monitors. Do not use one that reflects light!

Above are things that helped me the most. In addition you can also:

  • Get your eyesight checked. Glasses can help reduce eyestrain “work stress” on eye muscles.
  • Try massage and relax the muscles around your eyes once in a while.
  • Get checked for obvious allergies. Whether it is pollen or something else.