All Primary and Secondary School Classrooms in Yanshou County, Harbin, Install Eye-Protective Lights
In recent years, myopia among teenagers has become increasingly prominent, and classroom lighting is a key factor affecting students' eyesight. The Yanshou County Education Bureau in Harbin City attaches great importance to the protection of students' vision health, listing the installation of eye-protective lights in classrooms as a key livelihood project for 2025. Special funds were allocated to uniformly install nationally standardized LED eye-protective lights in all primary and secondary school classrooms throughout the county, improving the students' learning and eye-use environment from the source.

This eye-protective light installation project involved 7 schools and 165 classrooms, benefiting 5,233 students. A total of 471,300 yuan was invested, adhering to the principle of "phased implementation and comprehensive improvement" to ensure that the lighting conditions in every classroom meet national standards. Currently, the results in protecting students' vision are significant. According to monitoring data from schools that have already implemented the project, the rate of myopia among students has significantly decreased after the classroom lighting renovation. The myopia rate among primary and secondary school students in the county has decreased by more than 1.5% compared to the first half of the year, which is also better than the same period last year. The renovated classroom lights are softer and brighter, and the students' eye-use environment has been comprehensively optimized. Many parents have reported that "their children no longer experience eye strain when doing homework," expressing strong approval of the effectiveness of this beneficial measure.
Next, the Yanshou County Education Bureau will continue to promote the installation of eye-protection lights in classrooms, ensuring full coverage of all schools in the county by 2026. Simultaneously, it will combine this with measures such as cultivating students' eye habits and daily outdoor activities, creating a "soft and hard complement" approach to comprehensively build a protective network for students' vision health and safeguard the visual health of young people.





