School of Public Affairs, Baruch College-City University of New York, New York, New York.
JAMA Ophthalmol. 2014 Apr 1;132(4):471-7. doi: 10.1001/jamaophthalmol.2013.7682.
IMPORTANCE Understanding whether differences in the local availability of eye care professionals are related to differences in realized access to eye care is important for assessing whether and where public health efforts are needed to increase access to eye care professionals. OBJECTIVE To examine whether the county-level availability of ophthalmologists and optometrists is associated with measures of realized access to eye care for individuals with diabetes mellitus, diabetic retinopathy, or age-related macular degeneration (ARMD). DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS We studied a cross-sectional sample of US adults 40 years and older (1098 individuals with diabetes, 345 with diabetic retinopathy, and 498 with ARMD) from the 2005-2008 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Outcomes were whether diabetic individuals reported undergoing a dilated eye examination in the past year, whether individuals were unaware they had diabetic retinopathy, whether diabetic individuals had vision-threatening diabetic retinopathy, and whether individuals were unaware they had ARMD. RESULTS In logistic regression models that also included individual characteristics, individuals who lived in a county in the highest ophthalmologist availability quartile were less likely to be unaware they had diabetic retinopathy (predictive margin [PM], 66.1%; 90% CI, 48.8%-83.4%; vs PM, 84.1%; 90% CI, 78.7%-89.6%) and were less likely to have vision-threatening diabetic retinopathy (PM, 1.4%; 90% CI, 0.9%-1.9%; vs PM, 2.6%; 90% CI, 1.8%-3.4%) than individuals who lived in a county in the lower 3 ophthalmologist availability quartiles. Individuals who lived in a county in the lowest ophthalmologist availability quartile were more likely to be unaware they had ARMD (PM, 93.8%; 90% CI, 90.6%-97.0%; vs PM, 88.3%; 90% CI, 84.7%-91.9%) than individuals who lived a county in the higher 3 ophthalmologist availability quartiles. Optometrist availability quartiles were not significantly related to any of the outcomes. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE The results suggest that efforts to increase access to ophthalmologists to improve outcomes related to diabetic retinopathy or to increase awareness of ARMD should focus on improving access for diabetic individuals who live in counties in the lowest 3 quartiles of ophthalmologist availability and on individuals at risk of ARMD who live in counties in the lowest quartile of ophthalmologist availability.
重要性
了解眼科保健专业人员在当地的可获得性差异是否与实际获得眼科保健的差异相关,对于评估是否需要以及在何处开展公共卫生工作以增加获得眼科保健专业人员的机会至关重要。
目的
本研究旨在探讨县一级眼科医生和验光师的可获得性是否与糖尿病患者、糖尿病性视网膜病变患者和年龄相关性黄斑变性(AMD)患者实际获得眼科保健的措施相关。
设计、设置和参与者
我们研究了来自 2005-2008 年全国健康与营养调查的美国 40 岁及以上的横断面样本(1098 例糖尿病患者、345 例糖尿病性视网膜病变患者和 498 例 AMD 患者)。
主要结局和测量指标
结局包括糖尿病患者是否在过去一年中接受过散瞳眼部检查、患者是否不知道自己患有糖尿病性视网膜病变、糖尿病患者是否患有威胁视力的糖尿病性视网膜病变以及患者是否不知道自己患有 AMD。
结果
在还包括个体特征的逻辑回归模型中,生活在眼科医生可获得性最高四分位数的县的个体不太可能不知道自己患有糖尿病性视网膜病变(预测边缘 [PM],66.1%;90%CI,48.8%-83.4%;vs PM,84.1%;90%CI,78.7%-89.6%),且不太可能患有威胁视力的糖尿病性视网膜病变(PM,1.4%;90%CI,0.9%-1.9%;vs PM,2.6%;90%CI,1.8%-3.4%),而生活在较低的 3 个眼科医生可获得性四分位数的县的个体。生活在眼科医生可获得性最低四分位数的县的个体更有可能不知道自己患有 AMD(PM,93.8%;90%CI,90.6%-97.0%;vs PM,88.3%;90%CI,84.7%-91.9%),而生活在较高的 3 个眼科医生可获得性四分位数的县的个体。视光师可获得性四分位数与任何结局均无显著相关性。
结论和相关性
研究结果表明,为改善糖尿病性视网膜病变相关结局或提高 AMD 意识而增加眼科医生的可获得性,应重点关注改善生活在眼科医生可获得性最低的 3 个四分位数县的糖尿病患者的可获得性,以及关注生活在眼科医生可获得性最低四分位数县的有患 AMD 风险的个体。