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Starting a myopia management program

Getting Started in Myopia Management: Practical Steps to Build Confidence and Deliver Better Care

By Dr. Sheila Morrison, OD, MS, FAAO, FSLS, FCCSO

Myopia management has become an essential part of modern pediatric eye care. For many practices, the challenge is no longer why it matters, but how to integrate it into everyday clinical workflows. This article outlines a practical, structured approach to getting started with confidence.

Why Myopia Management Matters

Myopia is increasing at a pace that most practices could not have imagined a decade ago. Parents are more informed, research continues to strengthen the evidence for intervention, and clinicians are seeing younger patients progress more quickly. For many eye care professionals, the challenge is not understanding why myopia management matters. It is knowing how and when to begin.

The current consensus has shifted away from waiting for moderate or high myopia. Early education of families, consideration of intervention in at-risk pre-myopes, and timely treatment for any child demonstrating progression are now considered best practice. Importantly, starting a myopia management program does not require a complete overhaul of your clinic. It requires a structured approach, a few essential tools, and clear communication with families and staff.

Start With the Fundamentals

Before offering intervention, it is essential to ground both clinicians and staff in the fundamentals: why myopia progresses, which treatments are evidence-based, and what success realistically looks like. Managing expectations early helps avoid common misconceptions, such as assuming rapid correction rather than slowed progression.

Evidence-based options include night wear contact lenses (orthokeratology), daily wear contact lenses (soft multifocal is the most common), low-dose atropine, and myopia control spectacle lenses. Lifestyle and environmental modifications are also paramount for success.

There is no minimum age requirement for starting therapy; decisions should be guided by refractive status and risk factors. Younger age of onset, parental myopia, ethnicity, reduced outdoor time, and early loss of expected hyperopia all increase risk. Starting with one or two modalities you already feel comfortable prescribing allows confidence to build before expanding services.

Evaluate Your Practice Readiness

Most primary care practices already have the foundation required to begin myopia management. Retinoscopy, keratometry, or corneal topography, and a structured refractive history provide a strong baseline. Axial length measurement is a valuable addition as programs mature, but it is not mandatory at the outset.

Equally important is workflow readiness. Decide how myopia consultations will be scheduled, how follow-ups will be structured, and how chair time will be allocated. Identifying a consistent process early reduces stress for the clinician and creates a predictable experience for families.

Create a Clear Clinical Workflow

A repeatable workflow makes myopia care more efficient and scalable. Begin with a comprehensive baseline assessment, including refractive history, family history, binocular vision status, and corneal shape if contact lens-based therapies are being considered.

Follow-up schedules should be modality-specific but consistent. Map out visits for the first year, determine which clinical data will be collected, and clarify staff roles for pre-testing, education, and follow-up communication. A clear structure simplifies scheduling and helps parents understand the long-term nature of care from the outset.

Communicate Confidently with Caregivers and Patients

Clear communication is often the deciding factor in whether families move forward. Conversations should focus on long-term eye health rather than short-term prescription changes. Parents value understanding what treatment aims to achieve, what it cannot guarantee, and how lifestyle factors such as outdoor time and near-work habits influence outcomes.

It is also important to address quality of life. While clinical success has traditionally been measured by refractive and biometric outcomes, patient and caregiver experience matters. Monitoring comfort, visual function, and overall satisfaction ensures that management strategies remain sustainable and positive for the child.

Transparent discussion of fees improves trust. Many practices adopt bundled program fees to simplify financial conversations and clearly outline what is included in ongoing care.

Build and Empower Your Team

A successful myopia management program depends heavily on staff engagement. Front-line team members often introduce the concept, answer early questions, and reinforce messaging. Training staff in basic myopia theory, common terminology, and the purpose of specialized testing improves confidence and consistency.

In larger clinics, designating myopia coordinators to manage referrals, training visits, and follow-ups can greatly improve efficiency. Technical competency is essential as high-quality data collection underpins successful outcomes. Providing staff with simple scripts and knowing when to escalate questions to the clinician helps maintain trust and clarity for families.

Start Small, Then Expand

Launching a program with a small number of well-selected patients allows workflows to be refined and confidence to grow. Early successes help identify areas for improvement and build momentum across the team. As experience increases, practices can add modalities, introduce axial length monitoring, or develop enhanced educational tools.

Measure What Matters; and Know When to Adjust

Tracking outcomes is central to effective care. Refractive changes, corneal data, and axial length trends (where available) provide objective insight into progression. These metrics also guide decisions about continuing, modifying, or eventually tapering therapy.

Cessation of myopia management should be progression-based rather than age-based. While many patients slow between late adolescence and early adulthood, ongoing optical correction is still required, and some modalities, particularly orthokeratology, may continue to provide functional and lifestyle benefits beyond active progression years.

Taking the First Step

Myopia management is both an opportunity and a responsibility. With a structured approach, practical tools, and a team that shares the vision, starting a program is more achievable than many clinicians expect. Most importantly, early intervention can have a lasting impact on the long-term eye health of your pediatric patients.
For practices looking to get started, the first step is simply committing to begin. The rest builds naturally with experience, communication, and consistent follow-up.

About the Author:

Dr. Sheila Morrison, OD, MS, FAAO, FSLS, FCCSO

Dr. Sheila Morrison is an Alberta-based optometrist, educator, and clinical researcher specializing in cornea, contact lenses, myopia management, and dry eye. A former clinical university professor, she practices at Mission Eye Care in Calgary, Alberta, and supervises an accredited cornea and contact lens residency. She lectures, publishes internationally, and collaborates in clinical research.

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