Considering the high incidence of myopia - and its inherent morbidit- it
may wonder that the item is dealt with only sporadically in recent
literature, and almost never at international conferences. However,
there was a First International Conference on Myopia in New York 1964,
and the Second was held in Yokohama 1978, affiliated to the XXIII World
Congress of Ophthalmology. Here it was attempted to set out- lines for
future myopia research, and, as a practical implicaton, the arrange-
ment of the Third International Conference on Myopia was entrusted to
Danish ophthalmolOgists. This conference took place in Copenhagen,
August 24-27, 1980. To make the scope the widest possible, the
conference was, as was the pre- decessing in Japan, open not only to
ophthalmologists, but 'to all being active in the various aspects of
myopia research'. The conference report gives a picture of the
Copenhagen meeting. Furthermore, a platform or current status of myopia
research has hereby been established. The editors have made it their
main task to arrange the papers, and to bring them in a form suited for
print, while criticism by editorial referees has been considered
inappropriate. The papers give an impression of the ambiguity still
prevailing in the field, and although 't, rends' are obvious, a fmal
consensus of Conference was not arrived at. To document this state of
affairs, however, is considered a useful task.