Lens technology · 5 min read

Blue light coatings: marketing, evidence, and what we actually recommend.

Blue-light blocking lenses became a marketing category before they were a clinical category. Here's the version that's honest.

This is a working draft. The full article will publish at opening — a brief preview below.

What the evidence actually supports

The strongest evidence for blue-light filtration relates to circadian rhythm — specifically, evening screen exposure suppressing melatonin and disrupting sleep. The evidence for blue light causing retinal damage at consumer-device intensities, or directly causing eye strain, is weaker and contested.

Where we recommend it

  • Evening / late-night screen users who report sleep disruption
  • Shift workers and casino floor staff with irregular sleep cycles
  • Anyone using devices in the 90 minutes before bed

Where we don't push it

  • "Eye strain" alone — usually a refractive, accommodative, or ergonomic issue
  • Children's primary lenses, unless paired with a documented sleep/study pattern
  • Sunglass Rx — irrelevant outdoors

Full article publishes at opening.

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