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J Comm Eye Health 2003;16(45): 14
ABSTRACTS
Planning Low Vision Services in India A Population-based Perspective
Rakhi Dandona PhD, Lalit Dandona MD MPH, Marmamula Srinivas BA, Pyda Giridhar PhD, Rishita Nutheti MSc, Gullapalli N Rao MD
Objective: To access the prevalence and causes of low vision
in a population in southern India for planning low vision services.
Design: Population-based, cross-sectional study.
Participants: A total of 10,293 persons of all ages from 94 clusters
representative of the population of the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh.
Methods: The participants underwent a detailed eye examination,
including measurement of visual acuity with logarithm of the minimum angle
of resolution charts, refraction, slit-lamp biomicroscopy, applanation tonometry,
gonioscopy, and stereoscopic dilated fundus evaluation. Automated threshold
visual fields and slit-lamp and fundus photography were done when indicated
using predefined criteria.
Main Outcome Measures: Low vision was defined as permanent visual
impairment that was not correctable with refractive error correction or surgical
intervention. The participants with best-corrected distance visual acuity
<6/18 to perception of light or central visual field <10° because
of an untreatable cause in both eyes were considered as having low vision.
Results: Low vision was present in 144 participants, an age,
gender, and urban-rural distribution adjusted prevalence of 1.05% (95% confidence
interval, 0.82%-1.28%). The most frequent causes of low vision included retinal
diseases (35.2%), amblyopia (25.7%), optic atrophy (14.3%), glaucoma (11.4%),
and corneal diseases (8.6%). Multivariate analysis showed that the prevalence
of low vision was significantly higher with increasing age, and there was
a trend for higher prevalence with decreasing socioeconomic status. Extrapolating
these data to the estimated 1014 million population of India in the year 2000,
10.6 (95% confidence interval, 8.4- 12.8) million people would have low vision.
Conclusions: These data imply that there is a significant burden of low vision
in this population, suggesting the need for low vision services.
Published courtesy of : Ophthalmology 2002; 109: 1871-1878

