The cervical vertebra pulling injury treatment presses the expert's blind eye eyeball to make the "myopia secret recipe" stop. Cartier glasses; "Doctor, I've heard of a method for treating myopia by pulling the neck of a child, can you try it?" "Someone taught me to treat myopia in children by pressing the eyeball, why isn't the effect significant?" In the past two days, Dr. Lu Benlin, director of the Adolescent Vision Prevention and Treatment Center in Wuhan, received a hotline call from our newspaper where citizens announced shocking "myopia secret recipes." A caller with the number 671***** mentioned that her neighbor's child received massage treatment at a traditional Chinese medicine clinic, but the massage method was very peculiar: "The doctor pulls the child's neck from the back, left three times, right three times, then carries out an upgrade." This lady expressed wanting to take her child to try it, but she is not confident. Dr. Lu Benlin immediately checked via phone. The expert stated that the method of treating myopia by pulling a child's neck has never been heard of before and could be dangerous. The expert believes that randomly pulling the cervical vertebrae of adolescents in development may cause unnecessary harm. Another parent sought advice on the "myopia secret recipe," which involves pressing the child's eyeball to promote eyesight improvement. Dr. Lu Benlin said that even if eye health care improves vision through massage, it should be limited to pressing acupoints around the eye area. "Pressing the eyeball is certainly a mistake and can seriously lead to retinal detachment or blindness," the expert emphasized. Source: Wuhan Evening Paper.
(Note: The original text appears to have some grammatical inconsistencies and unrelated product mentions like "Cartier glasses," which were preserved in the translation for accuracy.)