Screen Time & Your Eyes: A Las Vegas Guide to Digital Eye Strain
If your eyes feel tired, dry, or blurry by the end of the workday, you're not alone — and Las Vegas's desert environment makes it worse. Here's what's happening and what you can do about it.
What Is Digital Eye Strain?
Digital eye strain (also called computer vision syndrome) is a group of symptoms caused by extended screen use. It's not a disease — it's your eyes telling you they're overworked. The American Optometric Association estimates it affects over 50% of people who use computers or digital devices daily.
The symptoms are familiar to most people: tired or sore eyes, headaches centered around the forehead or temples, blurry vision (especially when looking up from the screen), dry or irritated eyes, and neck or shoulder tension from poor posture while staring at a screen.
If this sounds like your daily 4 PM, keep reading.
Why Las Vegas Makes It Worse
If you live or work in the Las Vegas valley, you're dealing with a double hit that most digital eye strain articles don't address.
Desert-dry air plus air conditioning creates an indoor environment with extremely low humidity. Your tear film — the thin layer of moisture protecting your cornea — evaporates faster than it can replenish. Stare at a screen (which already reduces your blink rate by up to 60%) in a climate-controlled casino, office, or hotel, and you've created the perfect recipe for chronic eye discomfort.
Intense UV exposure when you step outside between screen sessions compounds the problem. Your eyes don't get a real break — they go from screen glare indoors to harsh sunlight outdoors.
This is why so many Las Vegas residents and hospitality workers experience worse eye strain than people in more humid climates — even with the same amount of screen time.
The 20-20-20 Rule
This simple habit relaxes the focusing muscle inside your eye (the ciliary muscle), which gets locked in a contracted state during close-up screen work.
It sounds too simple to work, but it's one of the most consistently recommended interventions by ophthalmologists. The challenge isn't understanding it — it's remembering to actually do it. Set a recurring timer on your phone if you need to.
7 Practical Changes That Actually Help
- Position your screen at arm's length and slightly below eye level. Looking slightly downward reduces the exposed surface area of your eye, slowing tear evaporation.
- Increase your text size. If you're leaning forward or squinting, your font is too small. This one change reduces the effort your eyes spend focusing.
- Use artificial tears throughout the day — not just when your eyes feel dry. In Las Vegas's climate, preventive lubrication makes a noticeable difference. Choose preservative-free drops.
- Blink deliberately. During screen use, your blink rate drops from about 15 times per minute to 5–7. Practice full, deliberate blinks every few minutes to refresh your tear film.
- Reduce overhead glare. Position your screen so windows are to the side, not directly behind or in front of you. Matte screen protectors help in bright environments.
- Consider a desk humidifier if you work in an air-conditioned office. Even a small USB humidifier near your monitor adds meaningful moisture to your immediate environment.
- Take real breaks. The 20-20-20 rule is a minimum. Every hour, stand up, walk around, and let your eyes fully rest for a few minutes. Your eyes and your back will thank you.
What About Blue Light Glasses?
You've probably seen blue light blocking glasses marketed as a solution for digital eye strain. Here's where we'll be straightforward: the research is mixed. A large 2023 Cochrane review found that blue light filters likely make no meaningful difference in reducing eye strain symptoms.
That doesn't mean they're harmful — if you feel they help you, keep using them. But the evidence suggests that the real culprits behind screen-related eye discomfort are focusing fatigue, reduced blink rate, and dry eyes, not blue light exposure itself. Addressing those three things (with the practical tips above) will do more than any lens coating.
When Screen Fatigue Might Be Something More
If your eye discomfort persists even after implementing these changes, it could signal an underlying issue that screen habits alone won't fix — such as uncorrected astigmatism, early dry eye disease, or a prescription that needs updating. A comprehensive eye exam can identify what's going on.
Digital eye strain is a symptom, not a diagnosis. Sometimes the solution is a new pair of glasses with the right prescription for your working distance. Sometimes it's treating an underlying dry eye condition — something we specialize in, especially given how many patients we see in Las Vegas with desert-climate dry eye.
The point is: you shouldn't just power through daily eye discomfort and assume it's "normal." It's worth getting checked.
Quick Workspace Checklist
Monitor distance: arm's length (20–26 inches)
Monitor height: top of screen at or slightly below eye level
Lighting: ambient light roughly matching screen brightness
Glare: no windows directly behind or in front of screen
Humidity: desk humidifier if in A/C environment
Drops: preservative-free artificial tears within reach
Timer: 20-20-20 reminder set on phone
Tired Eyes That Won't Quit?
If screen time is causing persistent discomfort, a comprehensive eye exam can determine whether it's digital strain, dry eye, an outdated prescription, or something else. We'll figure it out together.
Schedule an Eye Exam →