1.Prevalence of refractive error in malay primary school children in suburban area of Kota Bharu, Kelantan, Malaysia.
Syaratul-Emma HASHIM ; Hui-Ken TAN ; W H WAN-HAZABBAH ; Mohtar IBRAHIM
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2008;37(11):940-946
INTRODUCTIONRefractive error remains one of the primary causes of visual impairment in children worldwide, and the prevalence of refractive error varies widely. The objective of this study was to determine the prevalence of refractive error and study the possible associated factors inducing refractive error among primary school children of Malay ethnicity in the suburban area of Kota Bharu, Kelantan, Malaysia.
MATERIALS AND METHODSA school-based cross-sectional study was performed from January to July 2006 by random selection on Standard 1 to Standard 6 students of 10 primary schools in the Kota Bharu district. Visual acuity assessment was measured using logMAR ETDRS chart. Positive predictive value of uncorrected visual acuity equal or worse than 20/40, was used as a cut-off point for further evaluation by automated refraction and retinoscopic refraction.
RESULTSA total of 840 students were enumerated but only 705 were examined. The prevalence of uncorrected visual impairment was seen in 54 (7.7%) children. The main cause of the uncorrected visual impairment was refractive error which contributed to 90.7% of the total, and with 7.0% prevalence for the studied population. Myopia is the most common type of refractive error among children aged 6 to 12 years with prevalence of 5.4%, followed by hyperopia at 1.0% and astigmatism at 0.6%. A significant positive correlation was noted between myopia development with increasing age (P <0.005), more hours spent on reading books (P <0.005) and background history of siblings with glasses (P <0.005) and whose parents are of higher educational level (P <0.005). Malays in suburban Kelantan (5.4%) have the lowest prevalence of myopia compared with Malays in the metropolitan cities of Kuala Lumpur (9.2%) and Singapore (22.1%).
CONCLUSIONThe ethnicity-specific prevalence rate of myopia was the lowest among Malays in Kota Bharu, followed by Kuala Lumpur, and is the highest among Singaporean Malays. Better socio-economic factors could have contributed to higher myopia rates in the cities, since the genetic background of these ethnic Malays are similar.
Child ; Cross-Sectional Studies ; Female ; Follow-Up Studies ; Humans ; Malaysia ; epidemiology ; Male ; Prevalence ; Refraction, Ocular ; Refractive Errors ; complications ; epidemiology ; physiopathology ; Retrospective Studies ; Schools ; Suburban Population ; statistics & numerical data ; Vision, Low ; epidemiology ; etiology ; physiopathology ; Visual Acuity
2.Refractive Errors in Koreans: The Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 2008-2012.
Tyler Hyungtaek RIM ; Seung Hyun KIM ; Key Hwan LIM ; Moonjung CHOI ; Hye Young KIM ; Seung Hee BAEK
Korean Journal of Ophthalmology 2016;30(3):214-224
PURPOSE: Our study provides epidemiologic data on the prevalence of refractive errors in all age group ≥5 years in Korea. METHODS: In 2008 to 2012, a total of 33,355 participants aged ≥5 years underwent ophthalmologic examinations. Using the right eye, myopia was defined as a spherical equivalent (SE) less than -0.5 or -1.0 diopters (D) in subjects aged 19 years and older or as an SE less than -0.75 or -1.25 D in subjects aged 5 to 18 years according to non-cycloplegic refraction. Other refractive errors were defined as follows: high myopia as an SE less than -6.0 D; hyperopia as an SE larger than +0.5 D; and astigmatism as a cylindrical error less than -1.0 D. The prevalence and risk factors of myopia were evaluated. RESULTS: Prevalence rates with a 95% confidence interval were determined for myopia (SE <-0.5 D, 51.9% [51.2 to 52.7]; SE <-1.0 D, 39.6% [38.8 to 40.3]), high myopia (5.0% [4.7 to 5.3]), hyperopia (13.4% [12.9 to 13.9]), and astigmatism (31.2% [30.5 to 32.0]). The prevalence of myopia demonstrated a nonlinear distribution with the highest peak between the ages of 19 and 29 years. The prevalence of hyperopia decreased with age in subjects aged 39 years or younger and then increased with age in subjects aged 40 years or older. The prevalence of astigmatism gradually increased with age. Education was associated with all refractive errors; myopia was more prevalent and hyperopia and astigmatism were less prevalent in the highly educated groups. CONCLUSIONS: In young generations, the prevalence of myopia in Korea was much higher compared to the white or black populations in Western countries and is consistent with the high prevalence found in most other Asian countries. The overall prevalence of hyperopia was much lower compared to that of the white Western population. Age and education level were significant predictive factors associated with all kinds of refractive errors.
Adolescent
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Adult
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Age Distribution
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Aged
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Child
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Child, Preschool
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Cross-Sectional Studies
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Female
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Follow-Up Studies
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Humans
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Male
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Middle Aged
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*Nutrition Surveys
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Prevalence
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Refractive Errors/*epidemiology/physiopathology
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Republic of Korea/epidemiology
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Retrospective Studies
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Risk Factors
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Visual Acuity/*physiology
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Young Adult