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{{short description|Ineffective alternative eyesight improvement therapy}}
The '''Bates method''' is a system of exercises that, it is claimed, improves ] and reverses ocular disorders to normal. It is argued by proponents that it works by eliminating "mental strain" of any kind and restoring the "natural habits" of seeing. The Bates Method is the backbone of the '''natural vision improvement movement '''. The Bates method was first described in 1920 by ] ] in a book entitled ],
{{pp-protected|small=yes}}
and then subsequently in his monthly magazine entitled ''Better Eyesight''.
{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2016}}
{{Use American English|date=February 2020}}


{{Infobox alternative medicine
Although many people claim to have been helped by the method, the efficacy of the Bates method is rejected by mainstream medicine.<ref>http://visioneducators.com/articles/advocates_see_only_benefits_from_eye_exercises.pdf</ref> His theory that the eye does not focus by changing the power of the lens, but rather by elongating the eyeball, through use of the extraocular oblique muscles, was contradicted by mainstream ophthalmology and ] of his day and is still today.
| image = Bates and Assistant (higher res).jpg
| image_size =
| caption = William Bates and his assistant
| claims = The need for ] can be reversed by ].
| topics = ], ]
| orig_year = 1891
| orig_prop = ]<br />]
}}
{{Alternative medicine sidebar |fringe}}


The '''Bates method''' is an ineffective and potentially dangerous ] aimed at improving ]. Eye-care physician ] (1860–1931) held the erroneous belief that the ] caused changes in focus and that "mental strain" caused abnormal action of these muscles; hence he believed that relieving such "strain" would cure defective vision.<ref name=qw>{{cite news |publisher=] |vauthors=Worrall RS, Neyvas J, Barrett S |date=6 July 2018 |title=Eye-Related Quackery |url=https://www.quackwatch.org/01QuackeryRelatedTopics/eyequack.html |access-date=30 June 2019 |archive-date=22 May 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190522175058/https://www.quackwatch.org/01QuackeryRelatedTopics/eyequack.html |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name="pollack">{{cite book |last = Pollack |first = Philip |title = The Truth about Eye Exercises |location = Philadelphia |publisher = ] |year = 1956 |chapter = Chapter 3: Fallacies of the Bates System |chapter-url = http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.b4399673;view=1up;seq=41 }}</ref> In 1952, optometry professor ] wrote of Bates, "Most of his claims and almost all of his theories have been considered false by practically all visual scientists."<ref name="Chou">{{cite journal |journal = Review of Optometry |url = https://www.reviewofoptometry.com/article/exposing-the-secrets-of-fringe-eye-care |title = Exposing the Secrets of Fringe Eye Care |first = Brian |last = Chou |volume = 141 |number = 9 |date = 15 September 2004 |access-date = 3 September 2019 |archive-date = 30 June 2019 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20190630171622/https://www.reviewofoptometry.com/article/exposing-the-secrets-of-fringe-eye-care |url-status = live }}</ref><ref name=Marg>{{cite journal |url=http://brain.berkeley.edu/pub/1952%20April%20Flashes%20of%20Clear%20Vision.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080529152509/http://brain.berkeley.edu/pub/1952%20April%20Flashes%20of%20Clear%20Vision.pdf |url-status=dead |archive-date=2008-05-29 |last = Marg |first = Elwin |title = Flashes of clear vision and negative accommodation with reference to the Bates Method of visual training |journal = American Journal of Optometry & Archives of American Academy of Optometry |date = April 1952 |volume = 29 |issue = 4 |pages = 167–84 |doi = 10.1097/00006324-195204000-00001 |pmid = 14923801 }}</ref>
==Bates' Publications==


No type of training has been shown to change the ] of the eye.<ref name="AAO"/> Moreover, certain aspects of the Bates method can put its followers at risk: They may damage their eyes through overexposure to sunlight, not wear their corrective lenses when they need them (e.g., while driving), or neglect conventional eye care, possibly allowing serious conditions to develop.<ref name="Chou" /><ref name="Grierson">{{cite book |title = The Eye Book: Eyes and Eye Problems Explained |first = Ian |last = Grierson |publisher = ] |year = 2000 |chapter = Exercises for Eyes as an Alternative to Glasses |pages = 58–60 |isbn = 9780853237556 |chapter-url = https://books.google.com/books?id=YY0inTk-CEcC&pg=PA58 |access-date = 27 January 2016 |archive-date = 10 June 2016 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160610120431/https://books.google.com/books?id=YY0inTk-CEcC&pg=PA58 |url-status = live }}</ref>
His book ''Perfect Sight Without Glasses'' is now published as ''Better Eyesight Without Glasses.'' Because the copyrights are over 70 years old the old version is available free on the internet . See <ref>"William H. Bates" Perfect sight without glasses in pdf or Word format http://www.iblindness.org/books/</ref>.


== Bates' theories == == Early history ==
Bates theorized that various types of "mental strain" were responsible not only for ]s (such as ], ], ], and ]), but also for other abnormal eye conditions including ], ]s, ], ], ], ], and diseases of the ] and ].<ref name="BatesChap10">http://www.iblindness.org/books/bates/ch10.html</ref> According to Bates, relaxation was the only cure for each type of strain.<ref name="BatesChap10"/>
===Accommodation by extraocular muscle squeezing===
] is the process by which the eye increases ] to maintain ] on the ]. So when the eyes change from viewing a distant object to a near object accommodation is taking place.


In 1891, Bates published an article in the ''New York Medical Journal'' claiming to have successfully reversed seven cases of ], or myopia.<ref>{{cite journal | journal = ] | year = 1891 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=19oAAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA181 | pages = 181–183 | title = Improvement in the Vision of Myopia by Treatment Without Glasses | last = Bates | first = W.H. | access-date = 21 May 2020 | archive-date = 14 December 2014 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20141214074340/http://books.google.com/books?id=19oAAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA181 | url-status = live }}</ref> In 1911, Bates published an article claiming to have taught myopic schoolchildren how to correctly focus in the distance. He recommended that schools post a ] in each classroom and encourage students to read it daily.<ref>{{cite journal | journal = New York Medical Journal | date = 29 July 1911 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=-ZFMAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA237 | pages = 237–238 | title = The Prevention of Myopia in School Children | last = Bates | first = W.H. | access-date = 2 June 2020 | archive-date = 8 March 2021 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210308034402/https://www.google.com/books/edition/New_York_Medical_Journal/-ZFMAQAAMAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA237 | url-status = live }}</ref>
Bates rejected the orthodox view that accommodation was brought about by the action of the ] on the eye's ]<ref name="BatesChap6">http://www.iblindness.org/books/bates/ch6.html</ref>, and claimed that focus was maintained by varying elongation of the eyeball caused by the ]s. Bates claimed that the lens played no part in accommodation and reported that the extraocular muscles, and in particular the oblique muscles, squeeze the eyeball to obtain focus by elongation. Excessive tension of the recti muscles may also make, according to Bates, the eyeball too short (leading to ], and excessive tension of the oblique ''and'' recti muscles makes the eye ]).


In 1917, Bates teamed up with "'physical culture' faddist" ]<ref name="AMA 1923" /> on a "New Course of Eye Training" which was heavily advertised in the ''Physical Culture'' magazine. Bates' name was later dropped from the advertising, but Macfadden continued to market this correspondence course, which was renamed "Strengthening the Eyes". This course was criticized by the ]'s Bureau of Investigation as dangerous ]. In July 1919, Bates began publishing '']'', "A Monthly Magazine Devoted to the Prevention and Cure of Imperfect Sight Without Glasses". This was also criticized "as it were the product of a psychopathic ward".<ref name="AMA 1923">{{cite journal|year=1923|title=The Optical Theories of W. H. Bates|journal=]|url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uiuo.ark:/13960/t5z685546&view=1up&seq=153|volume=81|issue=15|pages=1301–1302|access-date=6 May 2021|archive-date=8 March 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210308010659/https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uiuo.ark%3A%2F13960%2Ft5z685546&view=1up&seq=153|url-status=live}}</ref>
Bates regarded the superior and inferior oblique muscles as "the muscles of accommodation".<ref name="BatesChap4">http://www.iblindness.org/books/bates/ch4.html</ref>


In 1920, Bates self-published a book, '']'' (or ''Perfect Sight Without Glasses''). In 1926, articles by his assistant Emily Lierman were re-printed in a book titled ''Stories From the Clinic''; some of these stories claimed that such methods had cured glaucoma and cataracts as well as refractive errors.<ref name="Gardner">{{cite book |last = Gardner |first = Martin |title = Fads and Fallacies in the Name of Science |year = 1957 |chapter = Chapter 19: Throw Away Your Glasses! |pages = |publisher = ] |isbn = 0486203948 |chapter-url = https://books.google.com/books?id=TwP3SGAUsnkC&pg=PA230 |title-link = Fads and Fallacies in the Name of Science }}</ref> In 1929, the ] lodged a complaint against Bates for advertising "falsely or misleadingly".<ref name=qw/>
===Refractive errors due to extraocular muscle squeezing===
Bates regarded the refractive state of the eye as variable and disregarded the notion that permanent changes in the shape of the eyeball caused ]s. Instead, he stated that the shape of the eyeball responded instantly to the action of the extraocular muscles upon it.<ref name="BatesChap7">http://www.iblindness.org/books/bates/ch7.html</ref>


== Underlying concepts ==
Bates claimed that straining to see at the near-point led to shortening of the eyeball resulting in ] (farsightedness), and that straining to see at the far-point led to lengthening of the eyeball leading to ] (nearsightedness). At first this seems back-to-front, but by straining to see at the near-point Bates did not mean habitual close-work, or even tensing of the muscles, he meant 'straining' in a mental sense. He makes this clear in his chapter entitled 'strain' where he says, "if the muscles respond to the minds desire, they do so without strain". Some have assumed that Bates saw prolonged tension in the extraocular muscles as directly causing eyeball deformation <ref name="Gottlieb">http://www.iblindness.org/articles/gottlieb-psych/ch2.html</ref>. His 'mental strain' is quite unconnected with muscle tension, and he sees the maladjustment as being in the brain, not the eye{{fact}}.


=== Accommodation ===
Bates concluded that myopia was related to apprehension, or what some may call "anxiety". He reportedly felt that good vision was nature's way, and that any other way was a strained way of seeing. Bates believed that it was impossible to consciously relieve the eyes of this tensing, and instead developed his method as a means of effecting subconscious relaxation.
{{Main|Accommodation (vertebrate eye)}}
] is the process by which the vertebrate eye adjusts ] to maintain ] on the ] while the eye's gaze shifts to a point either closer or farther away. The long-standing medical consensus is that this is accomplished by action of the ], a muscle ''within'' the eye, which adjusts the curvature of the eye's ].<ref name=WebMD>{{cite web |url = http://www.webmd.com/eye-health/features/natural-vision-correction-does-it-work |title = Natural Vision Correction: Does It Work? |first = John |last = Donovan |publisher = ] |date = 17 November 2015 |access-date = 6 April 2020 |archive-date = 22 June 2008 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080622193404/http://www.webmd.com/eye-health/features/natural-vision-correction-does-it-work |url-status = live }}</ref> This explanation is based in the observed effect of ] temporarily preventing accommodation when applied to the ciliary muscle, as well as images reflected on the crystalline lens becoming smaller as the eye shifts focus to a closer point, indicating a change in the lens' shape. Bates rejected this explanation, and in his 1920 book presented photographs that he said showed that the image remained the same size even as the eye shifted focus, concluding from this that the lens was not a factor in accommodation. However, optometrist Philip Pollack in a 1956 work characterized these photographs as "so blurred that it is impossible to tell whether one image is larger than the other", in contrast to ] that clearly showed a change in the size of the reflected images, just as had been observed since the late 19th century.<ref name="pollack" />


Bates adhered to a different explanation of accommodation that had already been generally disregarded by the medical community of his time. Bates' model had the ] controlling its focus.<ref name="pollack" /> In addition to their known function of turning the eye, Bates maintained, they also affect its shape,<ref name="Time">{{cite news |url = http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,884800,00.html |title = Exercise v. Eyeglasses |magazine = ] |date = 15 March 1943 |access-date = 3 May 2008 |archive-date = 7 September 2008 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080907023136/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,884800,00.html |url-status = dead }}</ref> elongating the eyeball to focus at the near-point or shortening it to focus at a distance.<ref name="BatesChap4">{{cite book |last = Bates |first = William H. |title = Perfect Sight Without Glasses |year = 1920 |chapter = Chapter 4: The Truth About Accommodation as Demonstrated by Experiments on the Eye Muscles of Fish, Cats, Dogs, Rabbits and other Animals |pages = 38–53 |location = New York |publisher = Central Fixation Publishing Co |chapter-url = https://books.google.com/books?id=Vl3SiyXmZVMC&pg=PA38 |isbn = 8890075635 |access-date = 27 January 2016 |archive-date = 10 June 2016 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160610114925/https://books.google.com/books?id=Vl3SiyXmZVMC&pg=PA38 |url-status = live }}</ref> Science author ] writes that many animals, such as fishes, accommodate by elongation of the eyeball, "it's just that humans aren't one of those animals."<ref name=Grant>{{cite book |first = John |last = Grant |title = Discarded Science |year = 2006 |publisher = FFF |location = Surrey, UK |isbn = 1904332498 }}</ref>
The concept that relaxing the extraocular muscles can reliably or predictably reduce refractive error has not been substantiated by patients whose muscles are loosened during ]. Although small refractive changes may occur following this type of muscle loosening surgery (]), these alterations are generally small, clinically insignificant, transient, and occur in both directions (stronger and weaker) {{cite journal | author = Preslan M, Cioffi G, Min Y | title = Refractive error changes following strabismus surgery. | journal = J Pediatr Ophthalmol Strabismus | volume = 29 | issue = 5 | pages = 300-4 | year = | id = PMID 1432517}}.


Laboratory tests have shown that the human eyeball is far too rigid to spontaneously change shape to a degree that would be necessary to accomplish what Bates described.<ref name="pollack" /> Exceedingly small changes in axial length of the eyeball (18.6–19.2 ]) are caused by the action of the ciliary muscle during accommodation. However, these changes are far too small to account for the necessary changes in focus, producing changes of only −0.036 ]s.<ref name=Drexler>{{cite journal |journal = Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science |date = 1 October 1998 |volume = 39 |issue = 11 |pages = 2140–47 |title = Eye elongation during accommodation in humans: differences between emmetropes and myopes |last1 = Drexler |first1 = W |last2 = Findl |first2 = O |last3 = Schmetterer |first3 = L |last4 = Hitzenberger |first4 = CK |last5 = Fercher |first5 = AF |url = http://www.iovs.org/cgi/reprint/39/11/2140 |pmid = 9761293 |access-date = 20 January 2009 |archive-date = 3 February 2009 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090203082909/http://www.iovs.org/cgi/reprint/39/11/2140 |url-status = live }}</ref>
Additional evidence that the genetic theory is wrong comes from research where scientists deliberately created strabismus in normal monkeys by surgical reattaching an extraocular muscle to the wrong place. To their amazement it was impossible to create a permanent state of strabismus and all the monkeys spontaneously straightened their eyes within a few weeks. <ref name="Beresford"> Steven M. Beresford, David W. Muris, Merril J. Allen, Francis A. Young. ''Improve Your Vision Without Glasses Or Contact Lenses : A New Program Of Therapeutic Eye Exercises ( Page 36 en 37 )''. Fireside, Inc; 1996. ISBN 0-684-81438-2.</ref>.
See also the discussion page about these 2 experiments.


=== Causes of sight problems ===
===Close work===
Bates Method advocates believe that viewing books, computer monitors, and other near-vision activities are harmless, in fact a good exercise, as long as a person maintains correct vision habits. They also believe that eyeglasses are at best a crutch and at worst actually make vision with the naked eye worse.


Medical professionals characterize ] as consequences of the eye's shape and other basic anatomy, which no evidence shows any exercise can alter.<ref name=AllAboutVision>{{cite web |url = https://www.allaboutvision.com/buysmart/see_clearly.htm |title = Do eye exercises improve vision? |date = March 2021 |publisher = AllAboutVision.com |first = Gary |last = Heiting |access-date = 20 March 2021 |archive-date = 11 February 2021 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210211094028/https://www.allaboutvision.com/buysmart/see_clearly.htm |url-status = live }}</ref> Bates, however, believed that these conditions are caused by tension of the muscles surrounding the eyeball, which he believed prevents the eyeball from sufficiently changing shape (per his explanation of accommodation) when gaze is shifted nearer or farther. Bates characterized this supposed muscular tension as the consequence of a "mental strain" to see, the relief of which he claimed would instantly improve sight.<ref name="Gardner" /><ref name="BatesChap9">{{cite book |last = Bates |first = William H. |title = Perfect Sight Without Glasses |year = 1920 |chapter = Chapter 9: The Cause and Cure of Errors of Refraction |pages = 89–105 |location = New York |publisher = Central Fixation Publishing Co |chapter-url = https://books.google.com/books?id=Vl3SiyXmZVMC&pg=PA89 |isbn = 8890075635 |access-date = 27 January 2016 |archive-date = 10 June 2016 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160610115531/https://books.google.com/books?id=Vl3SiyXmZVMC&pg=PA89 |url-status = live }}</ref> He also linked disturbances in the ] of blood, which he said is "very largely influenced by thought", not only to refractive errors, but also to ], ], ], and to more serious eye conditions such as ]s and ].<ref name="pollack" /><ref name="BatesChap10">{{cite book |last = Bates |first = William H. |title = Perfect Sight Without Glasses |year = 1920 |chapter = Chapter 10: Strain |pages = 106–13 |location = New York |publisher = Central Fixation Publishing Co |chapter-url = https://books.google.com/books?id=Vl3SiyXmZVMC&pg=PA106 |isbn = 8890075635 |access-date = 27 January 2016 |archive-date = 10 June 2016 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160610114931/https://books.google.com/books?id=Vl3SiyXmZVMC&pg=PA106 |url-status = live }}</ref> His therapies were based on these assumptions.<ref name="Gardner" />
===Eyeglasses===
Bates wrote: "At their best it cannot be maintained that glasses are anything more than a very unsatisfactory substitute for normal vision."<ref name="BatesChap8">http://www.iblindness.org/books/bates/ch8.html</ref> He claimed that eyeglasses injured the eyes and did not restore normal vision.<ref name="BatesChap8"/> The refractive condition of the eye, he maintained, is constantly changing, from day to day and from hour to hour, and so the prescribing of corrective lenses can only ever be right at the time they are fitted, after which they force the eye to adjust to them.


Bates felt that ], which he characterized as "eye crutches", are an impediment to curing poor vision. In his view, "strain" would increase as the eyes adjust to the correction in front of them. He thus recommended that ] be discarded by anyone applying his method.<ref name="Gardner" />
Bates cited many disadvantages to eyeglasses, maintaining that they adversely affected color perception, contracted the field of vision, and caused dizziness and headaches when the wearer viewed objects off-axis.<ref name="BatesChap8"/> `


== Bates' techniques== == Treatments ==
Bates claimed to have discovered that people with abnormal vision use their eyes differently than people with normal vision, and then created a system designed to help people to relearn the right vision habits. Advocates of the Bates Method claim that these vision habits are inseparably connected to normal vision. They assert that the Bates Method is a natural method that improves movement, relaxation, and circulation of the whole visual system. Bates' "exercises" are not aimed at muscle strengthening, but like many yoga practices are aimed at procuring a state of relaxation. Bates indicated that for his techniques to be effective eyeglasses must be discarded entirely, not simply worn less frequently or in a lower prescription.<ref>http://www.iblindness.org/books/bates/ch24.html</ref>


In his writings, Bates discussed several techniques that he claimed helped patients to improve their sight. These techniques were all supposed to relieve "strain" to which Bates attributed sight problems.<ref name="Gardner" />
'''''Relaxation''''' is at the core of the Bates Method, involving a set of practices which Bates advocates term "exercises in relaxation" and "movement exercises" <ref name="FAQ">http://www.seeing.org/intro/faq/faq05.htm</ref>. They emphasize that the term "exercise" is used in the same sense as "memory exercise" and does not imply muscle strengthening.


=== Palming ===
'''''Swinging''''' involves deliberate movements of the body with relaxed awareness of vision.
]


Bates suggested closing the eyes for minutes at a time to help bring about relaxation.<ref name="BatesChap12" /> He asserted that the relaxation could be deepened in most cases by "palming", or covering the closed eyes with the palms of the hands, without putting pressure on the eyeballs.<ref name="Gardner" /> If the covered eyes did not strain, he said, they would see "a field so black that it is impossible to remember, imagine, or see anything blacker", since light was excluded by the palms. However, he reported that some of his patients experienced "illusions of lights and colors" sometimes amounting to "kaleidoscopic appearances" as they "palmed", occurrences he attributed to his ubiquitous "strain" and that he claimed disappeared when one truly relaxed.<ref name="BatesChap12">{{cite book |last = Bates |first = William H. |title = Perfect Sight Without Glasses |year = 1920 |chapter = Chapter 12: Palming |pages = 123–35 |location = New York |publisher = Central Fixation Publishing Co |chapter-url = https://books.google.com/books?id=Vl3SiyXmZVMC&pg=PA123 |isbn = 8890075635 |access-date = 27 January 2016 |archive-date = 10 June 2016 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160610115628/https://books.google.com/books?id=Vl3SiyXmZVMC&pg=PA123 |url-status = live }}</ref> This phenomenon, however, was almost certainly caused by ] or "dark light". In fact, even in conditions of perfect darkness, as inside a cave, neurons at every level of the ] produce random background activity that is interpreted by the brain as patterns of light and color.<ref name="pollack" />
'''''Palming''''' or '''''cupping''''' is one technique that advocates claim achieves relaxation of the mind and the eyes. Palming requires a person to gently cup the palms of the hands over the closed eyelids, and attempt to see "perfect black" in order to give the mind and the visual system as much rest as possible. Then the person sits for five to fifteen minutes (or as long he or she wants) breathing deeply and easily with good posture.


If while palming one ends up applying pressure to the eyes, this may increase the risk of ].<ref name=AllAboutVision/>{{Unreliable medical source|date=March 2024}}
'''''Sunlight exposure''''' involves looking at the sun through closed eyelids. Bates considered light to be the "lifeblood" of healthy eyes. See the discussion on ] below regarding this controversial aspect of his program.


=== Visualization ===
'''''Central fixation''''' was considered very important by Bates. Recognizing that only a very small part of the retina is capable of the highest resolution, he claimed that many people, when reading, allow the central fixation needed to maintain a sharp image to wander, so that they are attempting to focus using a low resolution part of the retina. He emphasized that good fixation is about relaxing and allowing the eyes to change gaze rapidly and naturally, rather than straining to fixate, which results in staring. Staring is the result of tension, according to Bates, and very bad.


Bates placed importance on ]s, as he felt relaxation was the key to clarity of imagination as well as of actual sight.<ref name="Biomed">{{cite book |title = Ethics in Biomedical Research: International Perspectives |first = Frank J. |last = Leavitt |publisher = ] |year = 2007 |chapter-url = https://books.google.com/books?id=-Tr7WZd_GwQC&pg=PA203 |chapter = How to Save the World: Alternatives to Biomedical Research |pages = 203–07 |isbn = 978-9042021792 }}</ref> He claimed that one's poise could be gauged by the visual memory of black; that the darker it appeared in the mind, and the smaller the area of black that could be imagined, the more relaxed one was at the moment.<ref name="BatesChap13">{{cite book |last = Bates |first = William H. |title = Perfect Sight Without Glasses |year = 1920 |chapter = Chapter 13: Memory as an Aid to Vision |pages = 136–47 |location = New York |publisher = Central Fixation Publishing Co |chapter-url = https://books.google.com/books?id=Vl3SiyXmZVMC&pg=PA136 |isbn = 8890075635 |access-date = 27 January 2016 |archive-date = 10 June 2016 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160610120514/https://books.google.com/books?id=Vl3SiyXmZVMC&pg=PA136 |url-status = live }}</ref> He recommended that patients think of the top letter from an ] and then visualize progressively smaller black letters, and eventually a period or comma.<ref name="Gardner" /> He cautioned against "concentrating" on such images, as he regarded an attempt to "think of one thing only" as a strain.<ref name="BatesChap12" />
==Aldous Huxley - famous advocate of the Bates method==
The British writer ] (author of '']'') was one such advocate. Huxley claimed achieving successful results in his book entitled '']''. Huxley was among the students of ], who trained with Dr. Bates in ] and later authored ''Help Yourself to Better Sight''.


While Bates preferred to have patients imagine something black, he also reported that some found objects of other colors easiest to visualize, thus were benefited most by remembering those, because, he asserted, "the memory can never be perfect unless it is easy."<ref name="Gardner" /><ref name="BatesChap13" /> Skeptics reason that the only benefit to eyesight gained from such techniques is ''itself'' imagined, and point out that familiar objects, including letters on an eye chart, can be recognized even when they appear less than clear.<ref name="pollack" />
However, while Huxley undoubtedly believed his vision had improved, ] thought otherwise. In 1952 Cerf was present when Huxley spoke at a Hollywood banquet, wearing no glasses and apparently reading his paper from the lectern without difficulty:
:Then suddently he faltered&mdash;and the truth became obvious. He wasn't reading his address&mdash;he had learned it by heart. To refresh his memory he brought it closer and closer to his eyes. When it was only an inch away he still couldn't read it, and had to fish for a magnifying glass in his pocket to make the typing visible to him. It was an agonizing moment.<ref name="Gardner">


=== Movement ===
{{
cite book
| last=Gardner
| first=Martin
| title=Fads and Fallacies in the Name of Science
| year=1957
| publisher=Reprint: Courier Dover
| ISBN=0-486-20394-8
}} </ref> (p. 241: quotes Bennett Cerf re Huxley's vision in 1952)


{{multiple image
== Safety ==
| align = right
===Avoidance of conventional treatment===
| direction = horizontal
Advocates believe the Bates Method to be safe. Critics concede that most of the Bates techniques are harmless, apart from the possibility that faith in the Bates system could deter people with eye conditions requiring prompt care from seeking conventional treatment.
| header =
Professional Bates Method teachers use an disclaimer, which has to be signed by the student, that emphasises that a Bates Method teacher is not an ]. <ref>"Disclaimer http://www.visionsofjoy.org/disclaimer.htm</ref>.
| header_align =
| header_background =
| footer = Eye movement exercises
| footer_align = center
| footer_background =
| width =
| image1 = Eye exercise 1.jpg
| width1 = 125
| caption1 =
| image2 = Eye exercise 2.jpg
| width2 = 125
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Bates thought that the manner of eye movement affected the sight. He suggested "shifting", or moving the eyes back and forth to get an illusion of objects "swinging" in the opposite direction. He believed that the smaller the area over which the "swing" was experienced, the greater was the benefit to sight. He combined this with visualization, advocating that patients close their eyes and imagine movement of objects. By alternating actual and mental shifting over an image, Bates wrote, many patients were quickly able to shorten the "shift" to a point where they could "conceive and swing a letter the size of a period in a newspaper".<ref name="BatesChap15">{{cite book |last = Bates |first = William H. |title = Perfect Sight Without Glasses |year = 1920 |chapter = Chapter 15: Shifting and Swinging |pages = 159–71 |location = New York |publisher = Central Fixation Publishing Co |chapter-url = https://books.google.com/books?id=Vl3SiyXmZVMC&pg=PA159 |isbn = 8890075635 |access-date = 27 January 2016 |archive-date = 10 June 2016 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160610115624/https://books.google.com/books?id=Vl3SiyXmZVMC&pg=PA159 |url-status = live }}</ref><ref name="Gardner" />
===Sunlight exposure===
Bates gives several examples of patients' vision improving after having looked directly at the sun,<ref name="BatesChap17">http://www.iblindness.org/books/bates/ch17.html </ref> which in some situations ]. Figures in Chapter 17 of Bates' 'Perfect Sight Without Glasses' show several individuals looking at the Sun ''"without discomfort"'' and figure 48 shows somebody ''"Focussing the Rays of the Sun Upon the Eye of a Patient by Means of a Burning Glass"'' implying that this is a safe thing to do.<ref name="BatesChap17"/> Regarding "sun-gazing" as beneficial he goes so far as to say that: ''"In some rare cases... complete cures have been effected by this means alone."''<ref name="BatesChap17"/> Regarding looking directly at the sun, Bates also remarks that:


Perhaps finding Bates' concepts of "shifting" and "swinging" too complicated, ] suggested simply moving the eyes up and down, from side to side, and shifting one's gaze between a near-point and a far-point.<ref name="Gardner" />
''"In my experience such light has never been permanently injurious. Persons with normal sight have been able to look at the sun for an indefinite length of time, even an hour or longer, without any discomfort or loss of vision. Immediately afterward they were able to read the Snellen test card with improved vision, their sight having become better than what is ordinarily considered normal. "'' <ref name="BatesChap17"/>
{{clear}}


=== Sunning ===
According to Thomas R. Quackenbush, Bates modified this suggestion after having written ''Perfect Sight Without Glasses'' by stating that the sun should only be allowed to shine on '''''closed''''' eyes. <ref name=''Thomas R. Quackenbush"> Thomas R. Quackenbush ''Relearning to See ( Page 229 )''. North Atlantic Books ISBN 1-55643-205-4</ref>.


] being used to focus sunlight on someone's eye, from ''Perfect Sight Without Glasses''.]]
==Criticisms of the Bates Method==
===Theories of accommodation/focusing and refractive errors===
Critics of the Bates Method reject the theory that human eyes accommodate, or focus, due to elongation of the eyeball caused by “squeezing” of the extraocular muscles, as has been claimed to happen in some animals. Critics of the Bates Method instead support the mainstream theory set forth by ] that human eyes accommodate, or focus, due to the actions of the ciliary muscle (an intraocular muscle) and zonules changing the shape of the crystalline lens. To support this theory, critics of the Bates Method point to the action of various cycloplegic agents which temporarily paralyze accommodation by relaxing the ciliary muscle but leave the extraocular muscles, which control eye movements, unaffected. They also note that modern equipment, not available to Bates, has made possible the observation of the eye in great detail; such observations show the lens changing shape when the eye accommodates. <ref name="Quack">http://www.quackwatch.org/11Ind/bates.html</ref>


Bates advocated ], characterizing ill effects as "always temporary". This is at odds with the well-known risk of ] that can result from ].<ref name="pollack" /><ref name="Chou" /><ref name="Grierson"/>
Critics of the Bates Method contend that if the cause of myopia is continuous tensing of the muscles, either ciliary or extraocular, the Bates Method theory is that it should be possible to cure (or noticeably improve) it by causing intentional relaxation of the muscles; a process most commonly done using injections or topical administration of ]. The mainstream consensus on this, however, is that no significant improvement of the vision is obtained when muscles are relaxed in this manner. Although Bates claimed that the evidence against the orthodox theory of accommodation was "overwhelming", he acknowledged that the effect of atropine supported the orthodox theory in "about nine cases out of ten".<ref name="BatesChap6"/> <ref name="Quack"/>


In his magazine, Bates later suggested exposing only the white part of the eyeball to direct sunlight, and only for seconds at a time, after allowing the sun to shine on closed eyelids for a longer period.<ref>{{cite journal |journal = Better Eyesight |first = William H. |last = Bates |title = The Use of the Sun Glass |date = July 1929 |location = New York |publisher = Central Fixation Publishing Co |url = http://www.central-fixation.com/better-eyesight-magazine/better-eyesight-1929-07.php#sun-glass |access-date = 16 December 2008 |archive-date = 30 October 2008 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20081030075906/http://www.central-fixation.com/better-eyesight-magazine/better-eyesight-1929-07.php#sun-glass |url-status = live }}</ref> Posthumous publications of Bates' book omitted mention of the supposed benefits from direct sunlight shining on open eyes.<ref name="Marg" /> Even on closed eyes, direct sunlight exposure poses a risk of damage to the eyelids, including ].<ref name=AllAboutVision/>
===Efficacy===
{{clear}}
Optometrists and ophthalmologists that are aware of his work remain skeptical, to say the least. Skeptic ] characterizes Bates's book in ''Fads and Fallacies in the Name of Science,'' as "a fantastic compendium of wildly exaggerated case records, unwarranted inferences and anatomical ignorance." Bates theory of accommodation suggested the contraction of the ocular muscles resulted in changes in focusing power rather than changes in the lens and contraction of the lens zonules. With current high-resolution dynamic ultrasonic biomicroscopy, the Bates theory of accommodation has been proven false. Gardner suggested that the Bates method may however work, to a limited degree, by increasing the trainee's ability to interpret and extract information from blurred images.


== After Bates ==
The purported benefits are generally anecdotal and medical research often shows no clinical benefit. The medical community is often critical of the Bates method and lack of evidence-based medical support.<ref>Pollack P. The Truth about Eye Exercises. Philadelphia: Chilton Co., 1956, Chapter 3.</ref><ref>Kavale K, Mattson P.D. "One Jumped Off The Balance Beam": Meta-analysis of Perceptual-motor Training. Journal of Learning Disabilities 16:165-174, 1983.</ref><ref>Keogh BK and Pelland, M. Vision training revisited. Journal of Learning Disabilities 18:228-235, 1985.</ref><ref>Koller H. Is vision therapy quackery. Review of Ophthalmology March:38-49, 1998</ref> Some behavioral vision therapists continue to practice the Bates method despite research demonstrating lack of efficacy.


After Bates died in 1931, his methods of treatment were continued by his widow Emily and other associates. In 1932, ] published a book endorsing the Bates method but also adding new exercises and recommendations for his own dietary products.<ref name="Gardner" /> Most subsequent proponents did not stand by Bates' explanation of how the eye focused mechanically,<ref name="Gardner" /> but nonetheless maintained that relieving habitual "strain" was the key to improving sight.<ref name="Marg" />
== Other eye-exercise methods ==
In recent years, the growing interest in ] has led to an increase in the popularity of the Bates Method and other methods claiming success via visual training through eye exercises. One particularly controversial area is the efficacy of eye exercises in the treatment of ] (near-sightedness) and whether the use of eyeglasses makes myopia progressively worse.


=== Margaret Darst Corbett ===
Several points of view exist about the use of eye exercises to treat vision problems:
*Traditional mainstream ]s and ]s use eye exercises to treat a limited range of problems, particularly problems involving muscular imbalances and problems with coordination of eye movement between the two eyes. ''(See ].)''
*''Functional optometrists'' and ''optometric vision therapists'' are licensed, credentialed doctors of optometry, who specialize in treatment that involves eye exercises. They hold that such exercises are useful in improving a wide range of visual conditions, including focusing problems. The methods used are said to be backed by clinical studies and publications in peer-reviewed journals. ''(See ].)''
*The Bates method differs from other health systems that use eye exercises in a way that can be categorized as alternative medicine. Like ], the treatments used and the explanations of how they are said to work are rejected by mainstream medicine <ref name="Gardner"/>, despite personal testimony by people who claim to have been helped by such methods.


]]]
==Pathogenesis and control of myopia: the modern "debate"==
{{main|Myopia}}


] first met Bates when she consulted him about her husband's eyesight. She became his pupil, and eventually taught his method at her School of Eye Education in Los Angeles.<ref name=fullpollack7>{{cite book |last = Pollack |first = Philip |title = The Truth about Eye Exercises |year = 1956 |publisher = ] |location = Philadelphia |page = 7 |url = http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.b4399673 |access-date = 2 July 2016 |archive-date = 20 July 2017 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20170720205952/https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.b4399673 |url-status = live }}</ref> She was of the stated belief that "the optic nerve is really part of the brain, and vision is nine-tenths mental and one-tenth only physical."<ref name="Marg" /><ref name="corbett">{{cite book |last = Corbett |first = Margaret Darst |title = How to Improve your Sight |year = 1954 |publisher = ] |location = London |pages = 26–27 }}</ref>
Although not alone in his endeavors, Bates is commonly recognized as one of the first in the modern era to attempt to prevent, arrest, or reverse myopia and other refractive errors. His techniques (designed to eliminate “mental strain”) have been largely rejected by mainstream ophthalmology as ineffective{{fact}}, but certain pharmaceuticals, contact lenses, and surgeries have achieved varying degrees of success (at least on a temporary basis), as have vision therapy and plus lenses in the treatment of pseudomyopia.


In late 1940, Corbett and her assistant were charged with violations of the Medical Practice Act of California for treating eyes without a license. At the trial, many of her students testified on her behalf, describing in detail how she had enabled them to discard their glasses. One witness testified that he had been almost blind from cataracts, but that after working with Corbett, his vision had improved to such an extent that for the first time he could read for eight hours at a stretch without glasses. Corbett explained in court that she was practicing neither ] nor ] and represented herself not as a doctor, but only as an "instructor of eye training". Describing her method, she said, "We turn vision on by teaching the eyes to shift. We want the sense of motion to relieve staring, to end the fixed look. We use light to relax the eyes and to accustom them to the sun."<ref name=fullpollack7 />
In direct contrast to research over the past ten to twenty years which has implicated heavy amounts of near-work as a contributing factor to the development of myopia <ref name="NewScientist">http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn6117</ref> <ref name="NCBI">http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=15926878&query_hl=11</ref>, Bates emphasized that that near-work and “overuse of the eyes” were '''not''' necessary to cause myopia, and claimed that he “made many dogs myopic by inducing them to strain to see a '''distance''' object”. To Bates, refractive errors were due to a “loss of mental control” brought about by “strain”, specifically “strain of the mind”. He wrote: “The remedy is not to avoid either near work or distant vision, but to get rid of the mental strain which underlies the imperfect functioning of the eye at both points.”


The trial attracted widespread interest, as did the "not guilty" verdict. The case spurred a bill in the Californian State Legislature that would have then made such vision "education" illegal without an optometric or medical license. After a lively campaign in the media, the bill was rejected.<ref name=fullpollack8>{{cite book |last = Pollack |first = Philip |title = The Truth about Eye Exercises |year = 1956 |publisher = ] |location = Philadelphia |page = 8 |url = https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.b4399673 |access-date = 23 May 2020 |archive-date = 12 November 2020 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20201112003110/https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.b4399673 |url-status = live }}</ref>
Despite considerable evidence that blurred images appear to trigger changes in the axial length of the eyeball through a complex feedback mechanism, some Bates advocates hold the original hypothesis that “mental strain” is ultimately responsible for the development of refractive error through extraocular muscle squeezing of the globe. They contend that various eye exercises could affect a person’s refractive error by altering the structure of the eyeball; however, there is no modern research that directly supports these claims.


=== Aldous Huxley ===
==Natural vision improvement==
Bates is credited with founding the movement of natural eyesight improvement.<ref name="Quackenbush"> Edited by Thomas R. Quackenbush. ''Better Eyesight. The complete Magazines of William H. Bates''. North Atlantic Books, 2001. ISBN 1-55643-351-4.</ref>


]]]
Steven M. Beresford agrees with Bates regarding the possibility of improving eyesight naturally, saying in his book : "Pretending that the traditional use of " corrective " lenses is safe and effective is no longer acceptable. The public must be told the truth and given accurate information about the alternative methods of treatment now available."
In the book, Beresford et al assert that ] are neither safe or effective and that vision can be improved without the use of glasses or contact lenses.<ref name="Beresford"> Steven M. Beresford, David W. Muris, Merril J. Allen, Francis A. Young. ''Improve Your Vision Without Glasses Or Contact Lenses : A New Program Of Therapeutic Eye Exercises''. Fireside, Inc; 1996. ISBN 0-684-81438-2.</ref>


Perhaps the most famous proponent of the Bates method was the British writer ]. At the age of 16, Huxley had an attack of ], which, after an 18-month period of near-blindness, left him with one eye just capable of light perception and the other with an unaided ] of 10/200. This was mainly due to opacities in both ]s, complicated by ] and ]. He was able to read only if he wore thick glasses and dilated his better pupil with ], to allow that eye to see around an opacity in the center of the cornea.<ref name="Ceylon">{{cite journal |title = 'Fifty per cent terrific! fifty per cent non-existent': Aldous Huxley and medicine |journal = The Ceylon Medical Journal |volume = 49 |issue = 4 |pages = 142–43 |date = December 2004 |doi = 10.4038/cmj.v49i4.1932 |pmid = 15693459 |last1 = Basnayake |first1 = V |doi-access = free }}</ref>
Natural Vision Improvement markets itself as a lifestyle method of improving eyesight by wholistic means without the use of optical devices. It uses the Bates method "merged" with modern theories of brain function, character and responsibility for one’s self and state of being.
<ref name="Goodrich"> Janet Goodrich. ''Natural Vision Improvement''. Greenhouse Publications, 1986. ISBN 0-89087-471-9</ref>


In 1939, at the age of 45 and with eyesight that continued to deteriorate, he happened to hear of the Bates method and sought the help of Margaret Corbett, who gave him regular lessons.<ref name="Ceylon" /> Three years later, he wrote '']'', in which he related: "Within a couple of months, I was reading without spectacles, and what was better still, without strain and fatigue.... At the present time, my vision, though very far from normal, is about twice as good as it used to be when I wore spectacles."<ref>{{cite book |title = Aldous Huxley, Man of Letters: Thinker, Critic and Artist: Proceedings of the Third International Aldous Huxley Symposium, Riga 2004 |first = Bernfried |last = Nugel |publisher = LIT Verlag |location = Berlin-Hamburg-Münster |year = 2008 |page = 250 |url = https://books.google.com/books?id=jkC0gvN12DMC&pg=PA250 |isbn = 978-3825890346 }}</ref> Describing the process, Huxley wrote, "Vision is not won by making an effort to get it: it comes to those who have learned to put their minds and eyes into a state of alert passivity, of dynamic relaxation." He expressed indifference regarding the veracity of Bates' explanation of how the eye focuses, stating, "my concern is not with the anatomical mechanism of accommodation, but with the art of seeing."<ref name=Marg />
Various self-help books and programs exist claiming to improve vision "naturally" by various means.<ref name="iblindness"> Imagination Blindness.</ref> The ''See Clearly Method'' <ref name="SeeClearly">http://www.seeclearlymethod.com/ </ref> is one well-known program developed by four doctors calling themselves the ] and based on their book ''Improve Your Vision Without Glasses Or Contact Lenses : A New Program Of Therapeutic Eye Exercises''.<ref> court order see clearly method </ref> <ref> Electronic Retailing Association. </ref>
<ref> reaction on this court order of the natural vision improvement movement ( scroll a bit down )</ref>


His case generated wide publicity, as well as scrutiny. Ophthalmologist Walter B. Lancaster, for example, suggested in 1944 that Huxley had "learned how to use what he has to better advantage" by training the "cerebral part of seeing", rather than actually improving the quality of the image on the ].<ref name=Marg />
==References==
<div class="references-small">
<references/>
</div>


In 1952, 10 years after writing ''The Art of Seeing'', Huxley spoke at a Hollywood banquet, wearing no glasses, and according to ], apparently reading his paper from the lectern without difficulty. In Cerf's words:
==See also==
<blockquote>Then suddenly he faltered—and the disturbing truth became obvious. He wasn't reading his address at all. He had learned it by heart. To refresh his memory, he brought the paper closer and closer to his eyes. When it was only an inch or so away, he still couldn't read it, and had to fish for a magnifying glass in his pocket to make the typing visible to him. It was an agonizing moment.<ref name="Gardner" /></blockquote>
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* The ], a similar program


In response to this, Huxley wrote, "I often do use magnifying glasses where conditions of light are bad, and have never claimed to be able to read except under very good conditions."<ref>{{cite book |title = Letters of Aldous Huxley |first = Grover Cleveland |last = Smith |publisher = ] |year = 1970 |page = 815 |url = https://books.google.com/books?id=zcIZAAAAMAAJ&q=%22I+often+do+use+magnifying+glasses+where+conditions+of+light+are+bad%2C+and+have+never+claimed+to+be+able+to+read+except+under+very+good+conditions.%22 |isbn = 070111312X |access-date = 8 September 2020 |archive-date = 6 May 2021 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210506052701/https://books.google.com/books?id=zcIZAAAAMAAJ&q=%22I+often+do+use+magnifying+glasses+where+conditions+of+light+are+bad%2C+and+have+never+claimed+to+be+able+to+read+except+under+very+good+conditions.%22 |url-status = live }}</ref> This underscored that he had not regained anything close to normal vision, and in fact never claimed that he had.<ref>{{cite book |title = Aldous Huxley: A Biography |first = Nicholas |last = Murray |publisher = Macmillan |year = 2003 |chapter = Sorrow |pages = |chapter-url = https://books.google.com/books?id=ktDo9SCBfxoC&pg=RA1-PA421 |isbn = 0312302371 |url = https://archive.org/details/aldoushuxleybiog00murr/page/421 }}</ref>
==External links==
===Vision improvement self-help books===
Books about the '''''classic Bates method'''''. These books are closely related to Bates initial theory and instruction. Some however also talk about fitness and nutrients.
Books about the '''''Second generation Bates''''' are written by authors who worked as vision improvement consultants. They never knew Bates personally but developed their own approach using the Bates Method as a starting point. See :
*http://www.i-see.org/vision_books.html
*http://www.bettervision.com
*http://www.rebuildyourvision.com


=== Modern variants ===
===Free online books and articles by Bates===
*
*


"Natural vision correction" or "natural vision improvement" continues to be marketed by practitioners offering individual instruction, many of whom have no medical or optometric credentials. Most base their approach in the Bates method, though some also integrate ] techniques.<ref name="WebMD" /> Also, many ] books and programs, which have not been subjected to ], are aimed at improving eyesight naturally.<ref name="Harvard">{{cite journal |journal = Harvard Women's Health Watch |title = I can see clearly now … sort of |date = 1 July 2003 |url = http://goliath.ecnext.com/coms2/gi_0199-2994518/I-can-see-clearly-now.html }}{{dead link|date=July 2016}}</ref> Purveyors of such approaches argue that they lack the funds to formally test them.<ref name="educators">{{cite news |first = Robyn E. |last = Bradley |title = Advocates see only benefits from eye exercises |work = The Boston Globe |date = 23 September 2003 |url = http://www.boston.com/news/globe/health_science/articles/2003/09/23/advocates_see_only_benefits_from_eye_exercises/ |access-date = 24 March 2008 |archive-date = 3 February 2009 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090203185913/http://www.boston.com/news/globe/health_science/articles/2003/09/23/advocates_see_only_benefits_from_eye_exercises/ |url-status = live }}</ref>
===Supportive===
*
*
*
*
*
*


The heavily advertised "]" (of which sales were halted by a court order in November 2006, in response to what were found to be dishonest marketing practices)<ref name=Shin>{{cite news |first = Annys |last = Shin |url = http://blog.washingtonpost.com/thecheckout/2006/11/hold_onto_those_eyeglasses.html |title = Seeing the See Clearly Method for What It Is |date = 6 November 2006 |newspaper = The Washington Post |access-date = 14 March 2009 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20061110130445/http://blog.washingtonpost.com/thecheckout/2006/11/hold_onto_those_eyeglasses.html |archive-date = 10 November 2006 }}</ref> included "palming" and "light therapy", both adapted from Bates.<ref name=AllAboutVision2009>{{cite web |url = https://www.allaboutvision.com/buysmart/see_clearly.htm |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100306020747/https://www.allaboutvision.com/buysmart/see_clearly.htm |url-status = dead |archive-date = 2010-03-06 |title = The See Clearly Method & Other Programs: Do Eye Exercises Improve Vision? |date = May 2009 |publisher = AllAboutVision.com |first1 = Rob |last1 = Murphy |first2 = Marilyn |last2 = Haddrill |first3 = Gary |last3 = Heiting |access-date = 14 May 2009 }}</ref> The creators of the program, however, emphasized that they did not endorse Bates' approach overall.<ref>{{cite web |first1=Steven M. |last1=Beresford |first2=David W. |last2=Muris |first3=Mara |last3=Tableman |first4=Francis A. |last4=Young |url=http://www.strong-eyes.com/RESEARCH%20MASTER.pdf |title=Clinical Evaluation of the See Clearly Method |page=13 |access-date=14 March 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121224053114/http://www.strong-eyes.com/RESEARCH%20MASTER.pdf |archive-date=24 December 2012 |df=dmy }}</ref>


In his 1992 book ''The Bates Method, A Complete Guide to Improving Eyesight—Naturally'', "Bates method teacher" Peter Mansfield was very critical of ]s for prescribing corrective lenses. The book included accounts of 12 "real cases", but did not report any information about ].<ref>{{cite journal |doi = 10.1097/00006324-199711000-00020 |title = The Bates Method, A Complete Guide to Improving Eyesight—Naturally |year = 1997 |last1 = Grosvenor |first1 = Theodore |journal = Optometry and Vision Science |volume = 74 |issue = 11 |page = 880 }}</ref>
]
]


Czech native John Slavicek claims to have created an "eye cure" that improves eyesight in three days, borrowing from ancient yogic eye exercises, visualizations from the ], and the Bates method. Although he has testimonials from his neighbor and others, several of his students indicate that he has greatly exaggerated their cases. Slavicek's self-published manual, ''Yoga for the Eyes'', was rejected by an ophthalmologist who evaluated it, and evinced no interest from the ] and St. Erik's Eye Foundation in Sweden, as he had not conducted ] tests.<ref>{{cite news |work=The Prague Post |location=Czech Republic |title=Blind faith |first=Kristin |last=Barendsen |date=20 November 2003 |url=http://www.praguepost.com/archivescontent/38282-blind-faith.html |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130603051744/http://www.praguepost.com/archivescontent/38282-blind-faith.html |archive-date=3 June 2013 |df=dmy }}</ref>
]

]
== Possible reasons for claimed improvements ==
]

]
Some eye conditions may naturally change for the better with age or in cycles (ophthalmologist ] suggested that this happened with Aldous Huxley's keratitis<ref name="DukeElder">{{cite journal |first = Stewart |last = Duke-Elder |journal = British Medical Journal |date = 22 May 1943 |title = Aldous Huxley on Vision |pages = 635–36 |pmc = 2282772 |volume = 1 |issue = 4298 |doi = 10.1136/bmj.1.4298.635-a }}</ref>). A ] when first setting in sometimes results in much improved eyesight for a short time. One who has been practicing the Bates method will likely credit it for any improvement experienced regardless of the actual cause.<ref name="Gardner" />
]

]
When corrective lenses are removed, vision can adapt to lessen the initial perceived blur, sometimes by more than two lines on an eye chart.<ref name=Elliot>{{cite journal | title = The Bates method, elixirs, potions and other cures for myopia: how do they work? | first = David B. | last = Elliott | date = 13 February 2013 | journal = Ophthalmic & Physiological Optics | volume = 33 | issue = 2 | pages = 75–77 | doi = 10.1111/opo.12034 | pmid = 23406487 | doi-access = free }}</ref> This phenomenon is known as blur adaptation.<ref name=Khan>{{cite journal | title = The time course of blur adaptation in emmetropes and myopes | first = Kiren A. | last = Khan | date = 12 May 2013 | journal = Ophthalmic & Physiological Optics | volume = 33 | issue = 3 | pages = 305–310 | doi = 10.1111/opo.12031 | pmid = 23662962 | s2cid = 206233931 | doi-access = free }}</ref><ref name=Cuffin>{{cite journal | title = Blur adaptation: clinical and refractive considerations | first1 = Matthew P | last1 = Cufflin | first2 = Edward AH | last2 = Mallen | journal = Clinical and Experimental Optometry | year = 2020 | volume = 103 | issue = 1 | pages = 104–111 | doi = 10.1111/cxo.13033 | pmid = 31801179 | s2cid = 208641956 | url = https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/cxo.13033 }}</ref> Some studies have suggested that a learned ability to interpret blurred images may also account for perceived improvements in eyesight.<ref name="AAO">{{cite web |date = August 2013 |url = http://www.aao.org/complimentary-therapy-assessment/visual-training-refractive-errors-cta--october-200 |publisher = American Academy of Ophthalmology |title = Complementary Therapy Assessments: Visual Training for Refractive Errors |last1 = Harris |first1 = Jennifer K. |last2 = Emptage |first2 = Nicholas P. |last3 = Lum |first3 = Flora C. |access-date = 20 March 2014 |archive-date = 8 January 2016 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160108053815/http://www.aao.org/complimentary-therapy-assessment/visual-training-refractive-errors-cta--october-200 |url-status = live }}</ref>

== General research ==
{{See also|Vision therapy}}

In 2004 the ] (AAO) published a review of various research regarding "visual training",<ref name="WebMD" /> which consisted of "eye exercises, muscle relaxation techniques, biofeedback, eye patches, or eye massages", "alone or in combinations". No evidence was found that such techniques could ] benefit eyesight, though some studies noted changes, both positive and negative, in the ] of nearsighted subjects as measured by a ]. In some cases noted improvements were maintained at subsequent follow-ups. However, these results were not seen as actual reversals of nearsightedness, and were attributed instead to factors such as "improvements in interpreting blurred images, changes in mood or motivation, creation of an artificial contact lens by tear film changes, or a pinhole effect from ] of the pupil."<ref name="AAO" />

In 2005 the Ophthalmology Department of New Zealand's ] published a review of forty-three studies regarding the use of ]. They found that "As yet there is no clear scientific evidence published in the mainstream literature supporting the use of eye exercises" to improve visual acuity, and concluded that "their use therefore remains controversial."<ref name="Rawstron">{{cite journal |last1 = Rawstron |first1 = JA |last2 = Burley |first2 = CD |last3 = Elder |first3 = MJ |journal = Journal of Pediatric Ophthalmology and Strabismus |year = 2005 |volume = 42 |issue = 2 |pages = 82–88 |title = A systematic review of the applicability and efficacy of eye exercises |doi = 10.3928/01913913-20050301-02 |pmid = 15825744 }}</ref>

== General criticisms ==

=== Dead-end ===

A frequent criticism of the Bates method is that it has remained relatively obscure, which is seen as proof that it is not truly effective. Writer Alan M. MacRobert concluded in a 1979 article that the "most telling argument against the Bates system" and other ] was that they "bore no fruit". In regards to the Bates method, he reasoned that "If palming, shifting, and swinging could really cure poor eyesight, glasses would be as obsolete by now as horse-drawn carriages."<ref name=MacRobert>{{cite news |date = 28 March 1979 |newspaper = ] |first = Alan M. |last = MacRobert |url = http://www.skeptically.org/thinkersonreligion/id1.html |title = Hocus Focus: modern spiritualism |access-date = 24 March 2008 |archive-date = 10 October 2007 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20071010025318/http://skeptically.org/thinkersonreligion/id1.html |url-status = live }}</ref>

Philosopher Frank J. Leavitt has argued that the method Bates described would be ] scientifically due to his emphasis on relaxation and visualization. Leavitt asked, "How can we tell whether someone has relaxed or imagined something, or just thinks that he or she has imagined it?" Regarding the possibility of a ], Leavitt commented, "I cannot conceive of how we could put someone in a situation where he thinks he has imagined something while we know that he has not."<ref name="Biomed" />

=== Corrective lenses and safety ===
Discarding one's corrective lenses, as Bates recommended, or wearing lenses weaker than one's prescribed correction, as some Bates method advocates suggest, poses a potential safety hazard in certain situations, especially when one is operating a motor vehicle.<ref name="Grierson" /> ] related that his father, shortly after discarding glasses for this reason, wrecked his car.<ref name='J.Randi Bates'>{{cite web |url=http://www.randi.org/jr/2006-11/111706rampa.html#i3 |archive-url=https://wayback.archive-it.org/all/20110224220929/http://randi.org/jr/2006-11/111706rampa.html#i3 |url-status=dead |archive-date=24 February 2011 |title=Swift: the weekly newsletter of the JREF |access-date=6 April 2009 |last=Randi |first=James |date=17 November 2006 |df=dmy-all }}</ref> Bates method teachers often caution that when driving, one should wear the correction legally required.<ref name="Grierson" />

=== Avoidance of conventional treatment ===

A follower of the Bates method may neglect urgently needed medical treatment for a condition such as ], which can lead to blindness.<ref name="Chou" /> Also, children with vision problems may require early attention by a professional in order to successfully prevent ]. Such treatment may include exercises, but which are different from those associated with the Bates method, and parents who subscribe to Bates' ideas may delay seeking conventional care until it is too late.<ref name="Grierson" /> It may further be necessary for a child at risk of developing lazy eye to wear the proper correction.<ref name=Donahue>{{cite journal |title = Prescribing Spectacles in Children: A Pediatric Ophthalmologist's Approach |last = Donahue |first = Sean P. |journal = Optometry and Vision Science |date = February 2007 |volume = 84 |pages = 110–14 |doi = 10.1097/OPX.0b013e318031b09b |pmid = 17299340 |issue = 2 }}</ref>

== See also ==
{{Portal|Medicine}}

* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]

== References ==
{{Reflist|30em}}

== Further reading ==
* {{cite book |last = Grosvenor |first = TP |work = Primary Care Optometry |url = https://books.google.com/books?id=uEmQKPAOwccC&pg=PA370 |year = 2007 |publisher = Elsevier Health Sciences |isbn = 978-0750675758 |page = 370 |title = Nonsurgical Methods of Myopia Control or Reduction |edition = 5th |quote = There has never been any clinical or scientific evidence that these procedures are of any help in controlling myopia. }}

== External links ==
* {{cite news |magazine = ] |title = The Unending Search for 'Normal' Vision |date = 27 May 1957 |url = https://books.google.com/books?id=Mj8EAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA126 }}
* {{cite journal |title = Seeing Space: Undergoing Brain Re-Programming to Reduce Myopia |journal = Journal of Behavioral Optometry |volume = 5 |year = 1994 |pages = 123–31 |url =https://oepf.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/Seeing-Space_1.pdf |first= Antonia | last = Orfield M.A. O.D. |issue = 5 }}
* {{cite news |url = http://www.bbc.co.uk/insideout/east/series6/vision_correction.shtml |title = To See or Not to See–Natural Vision Correction |publisher = BBC |date = 27 September 2004 }}
* {{cite news |work = ] |title = Seeing eye to eye |first= Kate | last = Robertson |url = http://www.smh.com.au/news/health/seeing-eye-to-eye/2007/10/11/1191696080943.html?page=fullpage |date = 14 October 2007 }}

{{Naturopathy}}
{{Pseudoscience}}
{{authority control}}
{{Good article}}

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Latest revision as of 22:22, 23 December 2024

Ineffective alternative eyesight improvement therapy

Bates method
Alternative medicine
William Bates and his assistant
ClaimsThe need for eyeglasses can be reversed by relaxation.
Related fieldsOphthalmology, optometry
Year proposed1891
Original proponentsWilliam Horatio Bates
Bernarr Macfadden
Part of a series on
Alternative medicine
General information
Fringe medicine and science
Controversies
Classifications
Traditional medicine
Alternative diagnoses

The Bates method is an ineffective and potentially dangerous alternative therapy aimed at improving eyesight. Eye-care physician William Horatio Bates (1860–1931) held the erroneous belief that the extraocular muscles caused changes in focus and that "mental strain" caused abnormal action of these muscles; hence he believed that relieving such "strain" would cure defective vision. In 1952, optometry professor Elwin Marg wrote of Bates, "Most of his claims and almost all of his theories have been considered false by practically all visual scientists."

No type of training has been shown to change the refractive power of the eye. Moreover, certain aspects of the Bates method can put its followers at risk: They may damage their eyes through overexposure to sunlight, not wear their corrective lenses when they need them (e.g., while driving), or neglect conventional eye care, possibly allowing serious conditions to develop.

Early history

In 1891, Bates published an article in the New York Medical Journal claiming to have successfully reversed seven cases of nearsightedness, or myopia. In 1911, Bates published an article claiming to have taught myopic schoolchildren how to correctly focus in the distance. He recommended that schools post a Snellen chart in each classroom and encourage students to read it daily.

In 1917, Bates teamed up with "'physical culture' faddist" Bernarr Macfadden on a "New Course of Eye Training" which was heavily advertised in the Physical Culture magazine. Bates' name was later dropped from the advertising, but Macfadden continued to market this correspondence course, which was renamed "Strengthening the Eyes". This course was criticized by the American Medical Association's Bureau of Investigation as dangerous quackery. In July 1919, Bates began publishing Better Eyesight, "A Monthly Magazine Devoted to the Prevention and Cure of Imperfect Sight Without Glasses". This was also criticized "as it were the product of a psychopathic ward".

In 1920, Bates self-published a book, The Cure of Imperfect Sight by Treatment Without Glasses (or Perfect Sight Without Glasses). In 1926, articles by his assistant Emily Lierman were re-printed in a book titled Stories From the Clinic; some of these stories claimed that such methods had cured glaucoma and cataracts as well as refractive errors. In 1929, the Federal Trade Commission lodged a complaint against Bates for advertising "falsely or misleadingly".

Underlying concepts

Accommodation

Main article: Accommodation (vertebrate eye)

Accommodation is the process by which the vertebrate eye adjusts optical power to maintain focus on the retina while the eye's gaze shifts to a point either closer or farther away. The long-standing medical consensus is that this is accomplished by action of the ciliary muscle, a muscle within the eye, which adjusts the curvature of the eye's crystalline lens. This explanation is based in the observed effect of atropine temporarily preventing accommodation when applied to the ciliary muscle, as well as images reflected on the crystalline lens becoming smaller as the eye shifts focus to a closer point, indicating a change in the lens' shape. Bates rejected this explanation, and in his 1920 book presented photographs that he said showed that the image remained the same size even as the eye shifted focus, concluding from this that the lens was not a factor in accommodation. However, optometrist Philip Pollack in a 1956 work characterized these photographs as "so blurred that it is impossible to tell whether one image is larger than the other", in contrast to later photographs that clearly showed a change in the size of the reflected images, just as had been observed since the late 19th century.

Bates adhered to a different explanation of accommodation that had already been generally disregarded by the medical community of his time. Bates' model had the muscles surrounding the eyeball controlling its focus. In addition to their known function of turning the eye, Bates maintained, they also affect its shape, elongating the eyeball to focus at the near-point or shortening it to focus at a distance. Science author John Grant writes that many animals, such as fishes, accommodate by elongation of the eyeball, "it's just that humans aren't one of those animals."

Laboratory tests have shown that the human eyeball is far too rigid to spontaneously change shape to a degree that would be necessary to accomplish what Bates described. Exceedingly small changes in axial length of the eyeball (18.6–19.2 μm) are caused by the action of the ciliary muscle during accommodation. However, these changes are far too small to account for the necessary changes in focus, producing changes of only −0.036 dioptres.

Causes of sight problems

Medical professionals characterize refractive errors as consequences of the eye's shape and other basic anatomy, which no evidence shows any exercise can alter. Bates, however, believed that these conditions are caused by tension of the muscles surrounding the eyeball, which he believed prevents the eyeball from sufficiently changing shape (per his explanation of accommodation) when gaze is shifted nearer or farther. Bates characterized this supposed muscular tension as the consequence of a "mental strain" to see, the relief of which he claimed would instantly improve sight. He also linked disturbances in the circulation of blood, which he said is "very largely influenced by thought", not only to refractive errors, but also to double vision, crossed-eye, lazy eye, and to more serious eye conditions such as cataracts and glaucoma. His therapies were based on these assumptions.

Bates felt that corrective lenses, which he characterized as "eye crutches", are an impediment to curing poor vision. In his view, "strain" would increase as the eyes adjust to the correction in front of them. He thus recommended that glasses be discarded by anyone applying his method.

Treatments

In his writings, Bates discussed several techniques that he claimed helped patients to improve their sight. These techniques were all supposed to relieve "strain" to which Bates attributed sight problems.

Palming

Photo of someone "palming", from Perfect Sight Without Glasses.

Bates suggested closing the eyes for minutes at a time to help bring about relaxation. He asserted that the relaxation could be deepened in most cases by "palming", or covering the closed eyes with the palms of the hands, without putting pressure on the eyeballs. If the covered eyes did not strain, he said, they would see "a field so black that it is impossible to remember, imagine, or see anything blacker", since light was excluded by the palms. However, he reported that some of his patients experienced "illusions of lights and colors" sometimes amounting to "kaleidoscopic appearances" as they "palmed", occurrences he attributed to his ubiquitous "strain" and that he claimed disappeared when one truly relaxed. This phenomenon, however, was almost certainly caused by Eigengrau or "dark light". In fact, even in conditions of perfect darkness, as inside a cave, neurons at every level of the visual system produce random background activity that is interpreted by the brain as patterns of light and color.

If while palming one ends up applying pressure to the eyes, this may increase the risk of glaucoma.

Visualization

Bates placed importance on mental images, as he felt relaxation was the key to clarity of imagination as well as of actual sight. He claimed that one's poise could be gauged by the visual memory of black; that the darker it appeared in the mind, and the smaller the area of black that could be imagined, the more relaxed one was at the moment. He recommended that patients think of the top letter from an eye chart and then visualize progressively smaller black letters, and eventually a period or comma. He cautioned against "concentrating" on such images, as he regarded an attempt to "think of one thing only" as a strain.

While Bates preferred to have patients imagine something black, he also reported that some found objects of other colors easiest to visualize, thus were benefited most by remembering those, because, he asserted, "the memory can never be perfect unless it is easy." Skeptics reason that the only benefit to eyesight gained from such techniques is itself imagined, and point out that familiar objects, including letters on an eye chart, can be recognized even when they appear less than clear.

Movement

Eye movement exercises

Bates thought that the manner of eye movement affected the sight. He suggested "shifting", or moving the eyes back and forth to get an illusion of objects "swinging" in the opposite direction. He believed that the smaller the area over which the "swing" was experienced, the greater was the benefit to sight. He combined this with visualization, advocating that patients close their eyes and imagine movement of objects. By alternating actual and mental shifting over an image, Bates wrote, many patients were quickly able to shorten the "shift" to a point where they could "conceive and swing a letter the size of a period in a newspaper".

Perhaps finding Bates' concepts of "shifting" and "swinging" too complicated, Bernarr Macfadden suggested simply moving the eyes up and down, from side to side, and shifting one's gaze between a near-point and a far-point.

Sunning

A burning glass being used to focus sunlight on someone's eye, from Perfect Sight Without Glasses.

Bates advocated sungazing, characterizing ill effects as "always temporary". This is at odds with the well-known risk of eye damage that can result from direct sunlight observation.

In his magazine, Bates later suggested exposing only the white part of the eyeball to direct sunlight, and only for seconds at a time, after allowing the sun to shine on closed eyelids for a longer period. Posthumous publications of Bates' book omitted mention of the supposed benefits from direct sunlight shining on open eyes. Even on closed eyes, direct sunlight exposure poses a risk of damage to the eyelids, including skin cancer.

After Bates

After Bates died in 1931, his methods of treatment were continued by his widow Emily and other associates. In 1932, Gayelord Hauser published a book endorsing the Bates method but also adding new exercises and recommendations for his own dietary products. Most subsequent proponents did not stand by Bates' explanation of how the eye focused mechanically, but nonetheless maintained that relieving habitual "strain" was the key to improving sight.

Margaret Darst Corbett

Margaret Darst Corbett

Margaret Darst Corbett first met Bates when she consulted him about her husband's eyesight. She became his pupil, and eventually taught his method at her School of Eye Education in Los Angeles. She was of the stated belief that "the optic nerve is really part of the brain, and vision is nine-tenths mental and one-tenth only physical."

In late 1940, Corbett and her assistant were charged with violations of the Medical Practice Act of California for treating eyes without a license. At the trial, many of her students testified on her behalf, describing in detail how she had enabled them to discard their glasses. One witness testified that he had been almost blind from cataracts, but that after working with Corbett, his vision had improved to such an extent that for the first time he could read for eight hours at a stretch without glasses. Corbett explained in court that she was practicing neither optometry nor ophthalmology and represented herself not as a doctor, but only as an "instructor of eye training". Describing her method, she said, "We turn vision on by teaching the eyes to shift. We want the sense of motion to relieve staring, to end the fixed look. We use light to relax the eyes and to accustom them to the sun."

The trial attracted widespread interest, as did the "not guilty" verdict. The case spurred a bill in the Californian State Legislature that would have then made such vision "education" illegal without an optometric or medical license. After a lively campaign in the media, the bill was rejected.

Aldous Huxley

Aldous Huxley

Perhaps the most famous proponent of the Bates method was the British writer Aldous Huxley. At the age of 16, Huxley had an attack of keratitis, which, after an 18-month period of near-blindness, left him with one eye just capable of light perception and the other with an unaided Snellen fraction of 10/200. This was mainly due to opacities in both corneas, complicated by hyperopia and astigmatism. He was able to read only if he wore thick glasses and dilated his better pupil with atropine, to allow that eye to see around an opacity in the center of the cornea.

In 1939, at the age of 45 and with eyesight that continued to deteriorate, he happened to hear of the Bates method and sought the help of Margaret Corbett, who gave him regular lessons. Three years later, he wrote The Art of Seeing, in which he related: "Within a couple of months, I was reading without spectacles, and what was better still, without strain and fatigue.... At the present time, my vision, though very far from normal, is about twice as good as it used to be when I wore spectacles." Describing the process, Huxley wrote, "Vision is not won by making an effort to get it: it comes to those who have learned to put their minds and eyes into a state of alert passivity, of dynamic relaxation." He expressed indifference regarding the veracity of Bates' explanation of how the eye focuses, stating, "my concern is not with the anatomical mechanism of accommodation, but with the art of seeing."

His case generated wide publicity, as well as scrutiny. Ophthalmologist Walter B. Lancaster, for example, suggested in 1944 that Huxley had "learned how to use what he has to better advantage" by training the "cerebral part of seeing", rather than actually improving the quality of the image on the retina.

In 1952, 10 years after writing The Art of Seeing, Huxley spoke at a Hollywood banquet, wearing no glasses, and according to Bennett Cerf, apparently reading his paper from the lectern without difficulty. In Cerf's words:

Then suddenly he faltered—and the disturbing truth became obvious. He wasn't reading his address at all. He had learned it by heart. To refresh his memory, he brought the paper closer and closer to his eyes. When it was only an inch or so away, he still couldn't read it, and had to fish for a magnifying glass in his pocket to make the typing visible to him. It was an agonizing moment.

In response to this, Huxley wrote, "I often do use magnifying glasses where conditions of light are bad, and have never claimed to be able to read except under very good conditions." This underscored that he had not regained anything close to normal vision, and in fact never claimed that he had.

Modern variants

"Natural vision correction" or "natural vision improvement" continues to be marketed by practitioners offering individual instruction, many of whom have no medical or optometric credentials. Most base their approach in the Bates method, though some also integrate vision therapy techniques. Also, many self-help books and programs, which have not been subjected to randomized controlled trials, are aimed at improving eyesight naturally. Purveyors of such approaches argue that they lack the funds to formally test them.

The heavily advertised "See Clearly Method" (of which sales were halted by a court order in November 2006, in response to what were found to be dishonest marketing practices) included "palming" and "light therapy", both adapted from Bates. The creators of the program, however, emphasized that they did not endorse Bates' approach overall.

In his 1992 book The Bates Method, A Complete Guide to Improving Eyesight—Naturally, "Bates method teacher" Peter Mansfield was very critical of eye care professionals for prescribing corrective lenses. The book included accounts of 12 "real cases", but did not report any information about refractive error.

Czech native John Slavicek claims to have created an "eye cure" that improves eyesight in three days, borrowing from ancient yogic eye exercises, visualizations from the Seth Material, and the Bates method. Although he has testimonials from his neighbor and others, several of his students indicate that he has greatly exaggerated their cases. Slavicek's self-published manual, Yoga for the Eyes, was rejected by an ophthalmologist who evaluated it, and evinced no interest from the World Health Organization and St. Erik's Eye Foundation in Sweden, as he had not conducted double-blind tests.

Possible reasons for claimed improvements

Some eye conditions may naturally change for the better with age or in cycles (ophthalmologist Stewart Duke-Elder suggested that this happened with Aldous Huxley's keratitis). A cataract when first setting in sometimes results in much improved eyesight for a short time. One who has been practicing the Bates method will likely credit it for any improvement experienced regardless of the actual cause.

When corrective lenses are removed, vision can adapt to lessen the initial perceived blur, sometimes by more than two lines on an eye chart. This phenomenon is known as blur adaptation. Some studies have suggested that a learned ability to interpret blurred images may also account for perceived improvements in eyesight.

General research

See also: Vision therapy

In 2004 the American Academy of Ophthalmology (AAO) published a review of various research regarding "visual training", which consisted of "eye exercises, muscle relaxation techniques, biofeedback, eye patches, or eye massages", "alone or in combinations". No evidence was found that such techniques could objectively benefit eyesight, though some studies noted changes, both positive and negative, in the visual acuity of nearsighted subjects as measured by a Snellen chart. In some cases noted improvements were maintained at subsequent follow-ups. However, these results were not seen as actual reversals of nearsightedness, and were attributed instead to factors such as "improvements in interpreting blurred images, changes in mood or motivation, creation of an artificial contact lens by tear film changes, or a pinhole effect from miosis of the pupil."

In 2005 the Ophthalmology Department of New Zealand's Christchurch Hospital published a review of forty-three studies regarding the use of eye exercises. They found that "As yet there is no clear scientific evidence published in the mainstream literature supporting the use of eye exercises" to improve visual acuity, and concluded that "their use therefore remains controversial."

General criticisms

Dead-end

A frequent criticism of the Bates method is that it has remained relatively obscure, which is seen as proof that it is not truly effective. Writer Alan M. MacRobert concluded in a 1979 article that the "most telling argument against the Bates system" and other alternative therapies was that they "bore no fruit". In regards to the Bates method, he reasoned that "If palming, shifting, and swinging could really cure poor eyesight, glasses would be as obsolete by now as horse-drawn carriages."

Philosopher Frank J. Leavitt has argued that the method Bates described would be difficult to test scientifically due to his emphasis on relaxation and visualization. Leavitt asked, "How can we tell whether someone has relaxed or imagined something, or just thinks that he or she has imagined it?" Regarding the possibility of a placebo trial, Leavitt commented, "I cannot conceive of how we could put someone in a situation where he thinks he has imagined something while we know that he has not."

Corrective lenses and safety

Discarding one's corrective lenses, as Bates recommended, or wearing lenses weaker than one's prescribed correction, as some Bates method advocates suggest, poses a potential safety hazard in certain situations, especially when one is operating a motor vehicle. James Randi related that his father, shortly after discarding glasses for this reason, wrecked his car. Bates method teachers often caution that when driving, one should wear the correction legally required.

Avoidance of conventional treatment

A follower of the Bates method may neglect urgently needed medical treatment for a condition such as glaucoma, which can lead to blindness. Also, children with vision problems may require early attention by a professional in order to successfully prevent lazy eye. Such treatment may include exercises, but which are different from those associated with the Bates method, and parents who subscribe to Bates' ideas may delay seeking conventional care until it is too late. It may further be necessary for a child at risk of developing lazy eye to wear the proper correction.

See also

References

  1. ^ Worrall RS, Neyvas J, Barrett S (6 July 2018). "Eye-Related Quackery". Quackwatch. Archived from the original on 22 May 2019. Retrieved 30 June 2019.
  2. ^ Pollack, Philip (1956). "Chapter 3: Fallacies of the Bates System". The Truth about Eye Exercises. Philadelphia: Chilton Company.
  3. ^ Chou, Brian (15 September 2004). "Exposing the Secrets of Fringe Eye Care". Review of Optometry. 141 (9). Archived from the original on 30 June 2019. Retrieved 3 September 2019.
  4. ^ Marg, Elwin (April 1952). "Flashes of clear vision and negative accommodation with reference to the Bates Method of visual training" (PDF). American Journal of Optometry & Archives of American Academy of Optometry. 29 (4): 167–84. doi:10.1097/00006324-195204000-00001. PMID 14923801. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 May 2008.
  5. ^ Harris, Jennifer K.; Emptage, Nicholas P.; Lum, Flora C. (August 2013). "Complementary Therapy Assessments: Visual Training for Refractive Errors". American Academy of Ophthalmology. Archived from the original on 8 January 2016. Retrieved 20 March 2014.
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