Refractive correction: wear farsighted glasses for a month if the strabismus disappears completely, other treatment should be carried out according to the visual function, and if the visual function of both eyes is normal then you should come to the hospital for regular review. The refraction should be re-examined in about six months, and the prescription of hyperopic glasses should be reduced if strabismus does not appear. Other training should be provided in the hope that the physiological hyperopia will gradually decrease and the strabismus will eventually cease to appear even after the glasses are removed. If the strabismus is still present with glasses, a careful re-examination of the pupil with adequate dilatation is needed to increase the hyperopia correction to see if it is effective. In general, the prescription for hyperopia should subtract +1.00D from the detected full hyperopia to maintain muscle tension, and the rest of the prescription can be fully corrected. Such glasses do not improve hyperopia much, and are even blurrier than without glasses. The so-called transition correction is a prescription for slightly more hyperopia than the above. Full correction or excessive correction should be done as a stopgap measure to loosen the adjustment force and reduce the adjustment convergence. It should not be used for a long time. It should not be used for a long period of time because it will lead to a loss of accommodation and a renewed deficit of convergence. Therefore, the prescription should be reconsidered after a period of time, regardless of whether it is effective after wearing the lenses.