| Literature DB >> 31514739 |
Deena Rachel Zimmerman1, Hadas Ben-Eli2,3, Bruce Moore4, Monique Toledano1, Chen Stein-Zamir1,5, Ariela Gordon-Shaag6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There are many causes of visual impairment, and even blindness, which are treatable or at least preventable. Two such conditions are strabismus (crossed-eye, squint) and refractive error (visual image not focused on the most sensitive part of the retina). If these are not detected and corrected at an early age, they can lead to an irreversible impairment known as amblyopia (lazy eye). Pediatric vision screening and subsequent treatment for amblyopia and amblyogenic risk factors are thus key to preventing vision loss. Furthermore, vision screening can detect moderate to high hyperopia, which has been found to be associated with poor school readiness. Evidence-based recommendations call for screening children at 3-5 years of age; they are old enough to cooperate, but still within the window of effective intervention. However, these recommendations have yet to be universally implemented as the standard of care.Entities:
Keywords: Amblyopia; Preschool; Strabismus; Vision screening
Year: 2019 PMID: 31514739 PMCID: PMC6739935 DOI: 10.1186/s13584-019-0339-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Isr J Health Policy Res ISSN: 2045-4015
Prevalence of Amblyopia in Israel
| Study | Type | Population | Rate of amblyopia |
|---|---|---|---|
| Shapiro et al. 2017 [ | Retrospective | 107,608 pre-enlistees 17.5 0.6 years age. Northern Israel born 1971–1994 | Current 0.8% from 1.2% |
| Ore et al. 2009 & 2014 [ | Prospective | 2113 first and eighth grade schoolchildren | Did not measure amblyopia. Strabismus found to be 1.2–1.4% and 0.3–1.0% for 1st and 8th graders, respectively |
| Morad et al. 2007 [ | Retrospective | 305,712 pre-enlistees 17.5 0.6 years age. Entire country 1981–1986 | Native born Israelis 0.98, immigrants 1.5% |
| Eibschitz-Tsimhoni et al. 2000 [ | Prospective | 8 year olds born ~ 1986 808 Haifa -pre-screened 782 Hadera – no screening | Haifa prescreened 1% Hadera – no screening 2.6% |
Comparison of different venues for preschool vision screening
| Location | Advantages | disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| MCHC | 1.Location of well-child pediatric visits in Israel 2.Presence of parents 3. Built in follow-up | 1. Staff overwhelmed with current workload. 2. Low compliance with well-child screening at relevant ages. 3. Sensitivity lower when pediatricians and nurses do vision screening techniques such as VA, cover-test, red reflex, motilities, etc., 4.Intensive training would be needed for pediatricians and nurses to use retinoscopy 5. Optometrists performing vision screening would require addition human resources and accompanying expense. |
| Preschool | Can get high coverage due to “captive audience” | 1.No follow-up built into the system 2. Parents not present. 3.School health services are not currently uniform – some government, some private 4.Staff overwhelmed with current responsibilities so new staff would have to be hired or service out sourced |
| Pediatrician at healthcare funds | High coverage since most children of relevant ages see a pediatrician at least once during relevant time period | 1. These are primarily sick-child visits. Screening a sick child can give invalid results. 2. Time constraints of pediatricians' acute care visits. 3. Same limitations about types of exams as discussed for MCHC. 4. Standard well child visits was first recommended in 2019 [ |
| Optometrist at healthcare funds | 1.Trained professionals 2. Good controlled environment for screening children. 3.Parents present 4. Data would be part of electronic medical record and thus facilitate follow-up | 1.Currently unfunded 2. Parental compliance for any well visit likely to be low. |