| Literature DB >> 32868362 |
Lama Assi1, Lori Rosman2, Fatimah Chamseddine3, Perla Ibrahim4, Hadi Sabbagh4, Nathan Congdon5,6, Jennifer Evans7, Jacqueline Ramke7,8, Hannah Kuper9, Matthew J Burton7,10, Joshua R Ehrlich11,12, Bonnielin K Swenor13,14.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Vision impairment and eye disease are major global health concerns and have been associated with increased morbidity and mortality, and lower quality of life. Quality of life, whether generic, vision-specific or disease-specific, is an important measure of the impact of eye health on people's daily activities, well-being and visual function, and is increasingly used to evaluate the impact of ophthalmic interventions and new devices. While many studies and reviews have examined the relationship between vision or eye health and quality of life across different contexts, there has yet to be a synthesis of the impact of vision impairment, eye disease and ophthalmic interventions on quality of life globally and across the lifespan. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: An umbrella review of systematic reviews will be conducted to address these two questions: (1) What is the association of vision impairment and eye disease with quality of life? (2) What is the impact of ophthalmic interventions on quality of life? A search of related literature will be performed on the 11 February 2020 in Medline Ovid, Embase.com, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, Proquest Dissertations and Theses Global, and the grey literature, and repeated at the synthesis stage. Title/abstract and full-text screening, methodological quality assessment and data extraction will be conducted by reviewers working independently and in duplicate. Assessment of methodological quality and data extraction will be performed using Joanna Briggs Institute standard forms. Findings from the systematic reviews and their methodological quality will be summarised qualitatively in the text and using tables. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: No ethical approval is required. Results of this umbrella review will be published in a peer-reviewed journal and summarised in the Lancet Global Health Commission on Global Eye Health. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: This protocol was registered in the Open Science Framework Registries (https://osf.io/qhv9g/). © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: epidemiology; ophthalmology; public health
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32868362 PMCID: PMC7462163 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-037648
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Organisation of findings. Reviews will be divided according to the question they address (question 1 being vision impairment/eye disease, and question 2, ophthalmic interventions). For each question, reviews will be categorised as quantitative or qualitative, and within each category, they will be further grouped based on their quality-of-life measure and exposure (specific functional vision measure or eye disease for question 1, and intervention for question 2). Summary of findings tables will be further stratified by study population depending on the results available; potential subgroups include age category (children, working-age adults or older adults), country (low, middle or high income) or setting (community, hospital, clinic, institution).