Jones-Jordan Lisa A, Chitkara Monica, Coffey Bradley, Jackson John Mark, Manny Ruth E, Rah Marjorie J, Walline Jeffrey J
Ohio State University College of Optometry, Columbus, Ohio, USA.
Clin Exp Optom. 2010 May;93(3):157-63. doi: 10.1111/j.1444-0938.2010.00480.x.
The aim was to compare vision correction wearing time between myopic children and teenagers in a clinical trial of contact lenses and spectacles.
Parents of subjects in the Adolescent and Child Health Initiative for Vision Empowerment (ACHIEVE) study provided wearing times for spectacle and contact lens wear. Hours wearing primary correction and total correction were compared between the two treatment groups. Other factors hypothesised to be associated with wearing time were analysed.
The average wearing time of the primary correction differed significantly with the wearing time for the spectacles group being 91.5 hours per week compared to 80.3 hours per week for the contact lens wearers (p < 0.0001). Total correction time was slightly higher for the contact lens wearers, 97.5 hours per week, after accounting for time wearing spectacles. Higher refractive error was strongly related to longer wearing times (p < 0.0002). Age and treatment group were associated with wearing time (p = 0.005). Young contact lens wearers wore their lenses less than young spectacle wearers and older contact lens wearers. Low scores on an appearance quality-of-life scale were associated with longer wearing time in spectacle wearers compared to the low- and high-scoring contact lens wearers. Gender, spectacle satisfaction and activities were not related to wearing time.
While contact lens wearers, on average, wear their contact lenses less than spectacle wearers, they spend roughly the same amount of time wearing a refractive correction. Higher refractive error resulted in longer wearing times for both spectacle and contact lens wearers. Younger contact lens wearers wore their contact lenses for shorter periods than the spectacle wearers, but still wore them, on average, 74.4 hours per week (about 10 hours per day), suggesting that contact lenses are a viable alternative mode of correction for children.
在一项关于隐形眼镜和眼镜的临床试验中,比较近视儿童和青少年的视力矫正佩戴时间。
青少年和儿童视力增强健康倡议(ACHIEVE)研究中受试者的家长提供了眼镜和隐形眼镜的佩戴时间。比较了两个治疗组主要矫正和总矫正的佩戴小时数。分析了其他假设与佩戴时间相关的因素。
主要矫正的平均佩戴时间有显著差异,眼镜组为每周91.5小时,而隐形眼镜佩戴者为每周80.3小时(p < 0.0001)。在考虑佩戴眼镜的时间后,隐形眼镜佩戴者的总矫正时间略高,为每周97.5小时。更高的屈光不正与更长的佩戴时间密切相关(p < 0.0002)。年龄和治疗组与佩戴时间相关(p = 0.005)。年轻的隐形眼镜佩戴者比年轻的眼镜佩戴者和年长的隐形眼镜佩戴者佩戴隐形眼镜的时间少。与得分低和高的隐形眼镜佩戴者相比,外观生活质量量表得分低与眼镜佩戴者更长的佩戴时间相关。性别、眼镜满意度和活动与佩戴时间无关。
虽然平均而言,隐形眼镜佩戴者佩戴隐形眼镜的时间比眼镜佩戴者少,但他们花在屈光矫正上的时间大致相同。更高的屈光不正导致眼镜和隐形眼镜佩戴者的佩戴时间更长。年轻的隐形眼镜佩戴者佩戴隐形眼镜的时间比眼镜佩戴者短,但平均仍为每周74.4小时(约每天10小时),这表明隐形眼镜是儿童可行的替代矫正方式。