What this means for people with screen-heavy lives
your day is packed with laptops, phones, tablets, and near work that all happen at almost the same distance. That is why this topic keeps showing up in search and in real life. The pattern is already inside the day before anyone even reaches the Forever20/20 homepage.
People often have old prescription data somewhere, even when they do not have a perfect current baseline. The useful question is not whether you can win an argument about it. The useful question is whether the Forever20/20 framing helps you see the pattern more clearly than before.
How Forever20/20 handles the question
Forever20/20 can use prescription history as one layer of context rather than the entire story. That keeps the conversation grounded without pretending old numbers answer every question.
Just as important, the repo already draws a boundary around overclaiming. Forever20/20 is educational, proof-aware, and willing to say that some questions stay clinician-first. That keeps the article grounded instead of sliding into health-content theater.
What to do with the page
build resets around the screen habit itself instead of waiting until the day is already over. Go back to the homepage after you understand how old prescriptions fit into the broader measurement logic.
That is why every article in this engine funnels back to the homepage. The homepage is where the study, evidence wall, study-fit flow, and signup path all connect.