Myopia in children. Myopia, also called short-sightedness, is a common visual impairment that is reaching alarming proportions worldwide. The condition typically develops in school-age children and adolescents. It has long been thought that the condition was associated with too much reading, but recent evidence suggests instead that a lack of exposure to natural outdoor light may play a role. To investigate this new theory, researchers compared rates of myopia among randomly selected young children (6 and 7 years old) of Chinese ethnicity living in either Sydney (Australia) or Singapore. The researchers found that 4 of the 124 children in the Australian sample had myopia, compared with 183 among the 628 children from Singapore

Required:
a. Display the findings in a two-way table. What percent of the children in the study had myopia?
b. What is that percent among the children living in Australia and among those living in Singapore?

Respuesta :

Answer:

a. percentage of children with myopia = 24.87%

b. 3.23% of children living in Australia have myopia

29.14% 0f children living in Singapore have myopia

Step-by-step explanation:

a.

the table is an attachment

percentage of children with myopia in this study

number of children with myopia in Australia = 4

number of children with myopia in Singapore = 183

total children with myopia = 4 + 183 = 187

total number of Australian children = 124

total number of Singapore children = 628

total number of children = 124 + 628 = 752

percentage with myopia = 187/752 * 100 = 24.87%

2.

percentage of Australian children with myopia

total children from Australia = 124

those with myopia = 4

percentage = 4/124 * 100 = 3.23% of children living in Australia have myopia

percentage of Singapore children with myopia

total number of children = 628

those with myopia = 183

percentage = 183/628 * 100 = 29.14% 0f children living in Singapore have myopia

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