Concerns over exposure to blue light has predicated several solutions to decreasing blue light exposure, including disabling or attenuating blue LEDs in displays, color shifting displays towards yellow, or wearing glasses that filter out blue light.
Digital filters Apple's and Microsoft's operating systems and even the preset settings of standalone computer monitors include options to reduce blue-light emissions by adjusting color temperature to a warmer gamut. However, these settings dramatically reduce the size of the
color gamut of the display, as they essentially simulate
tritan color blindness, thereby sacrificing the usability of the displays. The filters can be set on a schedule to activate only when the sun is down. In 2024, the
Daylight Computer Co. created the Daylight DC-1, an Android tablet that does not emit blue light and is designed to be used outdoors in the sunlight. It can also be used indoors and utilizes an amber backlight.
Intraocular lenses During
cataract surgery, the opaque natural
crystalline lens is replaced with a synthetic
intraocular lens (IOL). The IOL may be designed to filter out equal, more or less UV light than the natural lens (have a higher or lower cutoff), and therefore attenuate or accentuate the blue-light hazard function. The effects of long term exposure of UV, violet and blue light on the retina can then be studied. However, it has been argued that IOLs that remove more blue light than natural lenses negatively affect color vision and the circadian rhythm while not offering significant photoprotection. Systematic reviews found no evidence of any effect in IOLs filtering blue light, and none provided any reliable statistical evidence to suggest any effect regarding contrast sensitivity, macular degeneration, vision, color-discrimination or sleep disturbances. One study claimed a large difference in observed
fluorescein angiography examinations and observed markedly less "progression of abnormal fundus autofluorescence"; however the authors failed to discuss the fact that the excitation beam is filtered light between 465 and 490 nm, is largely blocked by blue light filtering IOLs but not clear IOLs present in the control patients.
Blue light blocking lenses Lenses that filter blue light have been on the market for a long time in the form of brown-, orange-, and yellow-tinted sunglasses. These tinted lenses were popular for the belief that they enhanced contrast and
depth perception, but after early research showing the health risks of blue light exposure, became more popular for the purported health benefits of blocking blue light. The efficacy of blue-blocking lenses in blocking blue light is not disputed, but whether typical exposure to blue light is hazardous enough to require blue blocking lenses is highly disputed. One problem with the glasses is that they cannot achieve positive outcomes in blue-light hazard and sleep simultaneously. To be effective against blue-light hazard, the glasses must be worn continuously, especially during the day when exposure is higher. However, to force blue-light exposure that mimics the normal daylight cycle, the glasses must only be worn at night, when the exposure is already quite low from a photoprotective perspective. Regardless, some evidence shows that lenses that block blue light before bedtime may be particularly useful for people with
insomnia,
bipolar disorder,
delayed sleep phase disorder, or
ADHD, though less beneficial for healthy sleepers. The small number of studies contributing to those conclusions to date have methodological flaws or risks of bias, so further research is warranted. The UK's
General Optical Council has criticised
Boots Opticians for their unsubstantiated claims regarding their line of blue-light filtering lenses; and the
Advertising Standards Authority fined them £40,000. Boots Opticians sold the lenses for a £20 markup. Trevor Warburton, speaking on behalf of the UK
Association of Optometrists stated: "...current evidence does not support making claims that they prevent eye disease.". In July 2022, a Gamer Advantage advert on
Twitch channel
BobDuckNWeave was banned by the Advertising Standards Authority for making claims that blue light glasses could improve sleep without substantiation. ==See also==