The prevalence of refractive errors among adults in the United States, Western Europe, and Australia.


Autoria(s): Congdon, Nathan
Data(s)

2004

Resumo

OBJECTIVE: <br/><br/>To estimate the prevalence of refractive errors in persons 40 years and older.<br/><br/>METHODS: <br/><br/>Counts of persons with phakic eyes with and without spherical equivalent refractive error in the worse eye of +3 diopters (D) or greater, -1 D or less, and -5 D or less were obtained from population-based eye surveys in strata of gender, race/ethnicity, and 5-year age intervals. Pooled age-, gender-, and race/ethnicity-specific rates for each refractive error were applied to the corresponding stratum-specific US, Western European, and Australian populations (years 2000 and projected 2020).<br/><br/>RESULTS: <br/><br/>Six studies provided data from 29 281 persons. In the US, Western European, and Australian year 2000 populations 40 years or older, the estimated crude prevalence for hyperopia of +3 D or greater was 9.9%, 11.6%, and 5.8%, respectively (11.8 million, 21.6 million, and 0.47 million persons). For myopia of -1 D or less, the estimated crude prevalence was 25.4%, 26.6%, and 16.4% (30.4 million, 49.6 million, and 1.3 million persons), respectively, of whom 4.5%, 4.6%, and 2.8% (5.3 million, 8.5 million, and 0.23 million persons), respectively, had myopia of -5 D or less. Projected prevalence rates in 2020 were similar.<br/><br/>CONCLUSIONS: <br/><br/>Refractive errors affect approximately one third of persons 40 years or older in the United States and Western Europe, and one fifth of Australians in this age group.<br/>

Identificador

http://pure.qub.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/the-prevalence-of-refractive-errors-among-adults-in-the-united-states-western-europe-and-australia(28524d97-cdc2-4a01-a930-d4e60b07f0f8).html

Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess

Fonte

Kempen JH, Mitchell P, Lee KE, Tielsch JM, Broman AT, Taylor HR, Ikram MK, Congdon NG, O'Colmain BJ; Eye Diseases Prevalence Research Group. 2004 , ' The prevalence of refractive errors among adults in the United States, Western Europe, and Australia. ' Archives of Ophthalmology .

Tipo

article