Common sources of blue light
- Sunlight
- Fluorescent lights (like tube lights)
- Compact fluorescent lights (CFL bulbs and fixtures)
- Most screens, be it computer monitors, televisions, smart phones, and tablets
How to protect against blue light
- Reduce screen time – The lesser the time you spend exposing yourself to blue light, the lesser its effects will be.
- 20-20-20 rule – After looking at any digital screen for 20 minutes, look away at any object at least 20 feet away, for 20 seconds.
- Special blue-light filter glasses – Over the past few years, it has become common practice to use special yellow-tinted glasses which can block out most of the dangerous blue light rays.
- IOLs (Intraocular lenses) – This is perhaps the most extreme way to protect yourself from dangerous blue light rays. IOLs are thin, flexible, and clear plastic lenses that are generally used to replace the natural lens of a human eye after it gets damaged, or cloudy due to cataract. Commonly, IOLs keep out nearly all UV light, just like a natural lens, but some special types of IOLs can protect from blue light as well.
- Turn on Eye-Care mode on your device – Most devices nowadays come with a night / eye-care mode that make the screen warmer and claim to nullify blue-light damage. While this isn’t the ideal solution, if you can’t avoid your screen and you don’t have access to blue-light filter glasses, this may offer some level of protection.