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340 points jbornhorst | 6 comments | | HN request time: 0.923s | source | bottom

I’m digging into an idea around eyeglasses, screen-time, and vision discomfort. If you wear prescription glasses but still get headaches, eye strain, or blurry vision after long screen days, I’d love to chat briefly (20–30 min).

Pure research, zero selling.

Interested? Drop a comment below or email me directly at jbornhorst [at] gmail.com. I’ll coordinate a convenient time to talk.

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Night_Thastus ◴[] No.43292139[source]
I'm nearsighted with no astigmatism, so I have a simple -2/-2 prescription (if I remember correctly).

I sit at a screen 8-16 hours a day. I get strong headaches every single day, for which I keep a supply of ibuprofen at work and home. 400mg a day is generally plenty.

I do not wear my glasses while at the screen, as it's close enough that I don't have any issues.

I suspect my headaches are neck muscle related, not eyesight, but I haven't investigated further.

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jolmg ◴[] No.43292278[source]
Taking pain meds daily for life doesn't seem like a good plan.

Maybe try e-ink? There are e-ink monitors on the market if that works, if the problem's the light. You can also try software like Redshift[1] for regular monitors.

If it's your neck, at least put some books under your monitor stand, if you're not able to get better monitor mounts. Or lower your chair. You should be looking straight ahead for your monitor, so your neck muscles shouldn't have to do much work.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Redshift_(software)

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1. bmurphy1976 ◴[] No.43293474[source]
>Taking pain meds daily for life doesn't seem like a good plan.

Definitely not a good plan, especially Ibuprofen. My mother took Ibuprofen for years to manage her arthritis and that absolutely wrecked her kidneys. Not to mention Ibuprofen can also cause internal bleeding. It's a quick short term fix but not a good long term solution.

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2. OJFord ◴[] No.43296899[source]
> especially ibuprofen [...] wrecked her kidneys

As opposed to what? It's all metabolised by something, choose what you wreck. Take paracetamol routinely instead and you'll wreck your liver instead.

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3. ◴[] No.43297169[source]
4. user_7832 ◴[] No.43298115[source]
IMO neither is good for chronic pain management. Ibuprofen reduces blood flow to the kidneys which causes (chronically) cell death. Weirdly paracetamol is bad for the liver as you mention… unless you already have a bad liver, in which case it’s somehow the recommended pain medicine? (For responses I’ve unfortunately forgotten).

It’s much harder to address the root issue (speaking as someone who’s taken their fair share of pain meds themselves), but it’s infinitely better in the long term.

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5. OJFord ◴[] No.43299379{3}[source]
Certainly didn't mean to suggest they are, especially not without professional medical advice. (Not just to check the dose or have a different one prescribed, but for a PPI to protect stomach lining from taking a lot of ibuprofen for example.) The non-prescription doses on the packaging are suitable short-term, for a one-off headache or to manage a fever, but continued use (a bad injury meaning your taking it several days even) should be with advice, that might differ.
6. winux-arch ◴[] No.43302647[source]
Paracetamol is world standard for long chronic treatment. It starts tu hurt your liver only on big dosis. Source: FORTA List https://forta.umm.uni-heidelberg.de/