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Bingjie Wang

Bingjie Wang

PhD Candidate
Postgraduate Research Student
Medicine & Health School of Optometry and Vision Science

Biography

Bingjie Wang is a clinical optometrist with over a decade of experience, with an interest in Pediatric Optometry. After completing her optometry training in Australia, she pursued basic ophthalmology training at the Fudan Eye & ENT Hospital in Shanghai, China. Bingjie founded her own optometry practice in Shanghai and helped establish multiple pediatric optometry departments for Wellem Medical Group across China. Her clinical interests include myopia prevention and control, and orthokeratology. Currently, she is pursuing a Ph.D. focused on predicting the onset of myopia in children, aiming to contribute to early detection and intervention strategies in pediatric eye care.

Research Title

The utility of axial length measurements with and without ocular parameters in myopia management.

Supervisors

  • Dr Pauline Kang
  • Dr Kathleen Watt
  • Assoc Prof Zhi (Peter) Chen

Research Abstract

Myopia has become a global epidemic with significant public health impacts. Identifying the child at risk of developing myopia, i.e., the pre-myopic child, and implementing strategies to prevent the onset of myopia could significantly reduce the burden of myopia on an individual and society. My research aims to develop a prediction algorithm using ocular biometry and other factors to predict the future development of myopia in at-risk children.

Email:

bingjie.wang@unsw.edu.au

Wang, B., Watt, K., Chen, Z., & Kang, P. (2023). Predicting the child who will become myopic - can we prevent onset?. Clinical & experimental optometry, 106(8), 815–824.

Huang, Y., Chen, Z., Wang, B., Zhao, J., Zhou, X., Qu, X., Wang, X., & Zhou, X. (2023). Chinese Parents' Perspective on Myopia: A Cross-Sectional Survey Study. Ophthalmology and therapy, 12(5), 2409–2425.

Chen, Z., Gu, D., Wang, B., Kang, P., Watt, K., Yang, Z., & Zhou, X. (2023). Significant myopic shift over time: Sixteen-year trends in overall refraction and age of myopia onset among Chinese children, with a focus on ages 4-6 years. Journal of global health, 13, 04144.

Li, C., Zeng, L., Zhou, J., Wang, B., & Chen, Z. (2022). To Achieve a Bullseye: Factors Related to Corneal Refractive Therapy Orthokeratology Lens Toricity. Journal of clinical medicine, 11(19), 5635.

Yu, M., Liu, W., Wang, B., & Dai, J. (2021). Short Wavelength (Blue) Light Is Protective for Lens-Induced Myopia in Guinea Pigs Potentially Through a Retinoic Acid-Related Mechanism. Investigative ophthalmology & visual science, 62(1), 21.

Wang, J., Xi, S., Wang, B., Chen, Z., Zheng, K., & Zhou, X. (2020). Clinical Observation of Silicon Hydrogel Contact Lens Fitted Immediately after Small Incision Lenticule Extraction (SMILE). Journal of ophthalmology, 2020, 2604917.

Wang, B., Naidu, R. K., & Qu, X. (2017). Factors related to axial length elongation and myopia progression in orthokeratology practice. PloS one, 12(4), e0175913.

Liu, S., Li, S., Wang, B., Lin, X., Wu, Y., Liu, H., Qu, X., Dai, J., Zhou, X., & Zhou, H. (2016). Scleral Cross-Linking Using Riboflavin UVA Irradiation for the Prevention of Myopia Progression in a Guinea Pig Model: Blocked Axial Extension and Altered Scleral Microstructure. PloS one, 11(11), e0165792.

Maseedupally, V. K., Gifford, P., Lum, E., Naidu, R., Sidawi, D., Wang, B., & Swarbrick, H. A. (2016). Treatment Zone Decentration During Orthokeratology on Eyes with Corneal Toricity. Optometry and vision science : official publication of the American Academy of Optometry, 93(9), 1101–1111.

Wang, B., Zhang, Z., Naidu, R. K., Chu, R., Dai, J., Qu, X., Yu, Z., & Zhou, H. (2016). Comparison of the change in posterior corneal elevation and corneal biomechanical parameters after small incision lenticule extraction and femtosecond laser-assisted LASIK for high myopia correction. Contact lens & anterior eye : the journal of the British Contact Lens Association, 39(3), 191–196.

Yu, M., Chen, M., Wang, B., Zou, L., Zhu, X., & Dai, J. (2015). Comparison of Visual Quality After SMILE and LASEK for Mild to Moderate Myopia. Journal of refractive surgery (Thorofare, N.J. : 1995), 31(12), 795–800.

Wang, B., Naidu, R. K., Chu, R., Dai, J., Qu, X., & Zhou, H. (2015). Dry Eye Disease following Refractive Surgery: A 12-Month Follow-Up of SMILE versus FS-LASIK in High Myopia. Journal of ophthalmology, 2015, 132417.

  • MMed (Ophthalmology) Fudan University, B.Optom, B.Sc (ÁñÁ«¹ÙÍø)

  • Optometry Australia member