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Abstract

Background

Although the prevalence of blindness and visual impairment increases with age, most surveys of ocular disease do not include nursing home residents.

Methods

We conducted a population-based prevalence survey of persons 40 years of age or older residing in nursing homes in the Baltimore area. Of 738 eligible subjects in 30 nursing homes, 499 (67.6 percent) participated in the study. They had their eyes examined and their visual acuity tested and were interviewed in detail. The nonparticipants were more likely to be older, to be white, and to have lower scores on the Mini-Mental State Examination.

Results

The prevalence of bilateral blindness (visual acuity <20/200) was 17.0 percent. The prevalence of visual impairment (<20/40 but >20/200) was 18.8 percent. The frequency of blindness increased from 15.2 percent among those under 60 years of age to 28.6 percent among those 90 or older. The age-adjusted prevalence of blindness was 50 percent higher among blacks than among whites (P<0.01). As compared with the noninstitutionalized population from the same communities, the rate of blindness among nursing home residents was 13.1 times higher for blacks and 15.6 times higher for whites. Cataract was the leading cause of blindness, followed by corneal opacity, macular degeneration, and glaucoma. We judged that 20 percent of the functional blindness and 37 percent of the visual impairment could be remedied by adequate refractive correction.

Conclusions

Blindness and visual impairment are highly prevalent among nursing home residents. Much of this loss of vision could be treated or prevented with appropriate ophthalmologic care.

Details

Title
The prevalence of blindness and visual impairment among nursing home residents in Baltimore
Author
Tielsch, James M, PhD; Javitt, Jonathan C, MD; Coleman, Anne, MD; Katz, Joanne, ScD; Sommer, Alfred, MD
Pages
1205-1209
Section
Special Article
Publication year
1995
Publication date
May 4, 1995
Publisher
Massachusetts Medical Society
ISSN
00284793
e-ISSN
15334406
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
223979888
Copyright
Copyright © 1995 Massachusetts Medical Society. All rights reserved.