Lau Jerrald, Koh Wei-Ling, Ng Janelle Shaina, Lee Daphne, Peh Cherie Hui, Lam Janice, Tan Ker-Kan, Koh Victor
Department of Surgery, Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, National University of Singapore, Singapore, Singapore.
Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health, National University of Singapore, Singapore, Singapore.
Acta Ophthalmol. 2024 May;102(3):e257-e271. doi: 10.1111/aos.15773. Epub 2023 Oct 3.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, home-based and remote learning-particularly using electronic devices-was rapidly pushed out. Increased near-work, screen time exposure and lack of outdoor time are risk factors that contribute to childhood myopia, but it is difficult to adopt recommendations from prior publications as a consistent limitation in the literature is the heterogeneity of research methodology. This review seeks to systematically evaluate how observational studies published during the pandemic have quantified and measured risk factors and myopia in school-going children and adolescents.
Three scientific databases (PubMed, CINAHL, Scopus) were systematically searched from March 2020 to April 2022. Findings from relevant studies were descriptively summarised in relation to the PICOS-based objective of the review.
The final sample of 13 studies included research from six countries and comprised 1 411 908 children and adolescents. The majority of studies (N = 10; 76.9%) used spherical equivalent refraction (SER) of -0.5 dioptres or lower as a common definition of myopia. Most studies (77.8%) measuring screen time exposure found it higher during COVID-19 compared to pre-COVID, but only one study used objective measurement of screen time. The average critical appraisal score of the sample was only 66.1%, with a considerable number of studies failing to identify and adjust for potential confounders.
Future studies should consider emergent objective and validated measures of risk factors, account for potential a priori confounders and covariates and ensure more representativeness in the sociodemographic makeup of their samples.
在新冠疫情期间,家庭式和远程学习——尤其是使用电子设备的方式——迅速普及。近距离工作增加、屏幕使用时间延长以及户外活动时间减少都是导致儿童近视的风险因素,但由于研究方法的异质性,以往文献中的建议难以统一采用。本综述旨在系统评估疫情期间发表的观察性研究如何量化和测量学龄儿童及青少年的风险因素和近视情况。
系统检索了2020年3月至2022年4月期间的三个科学数据库(PubMed、CINAHL、Scopus)。相关研究结果根据本综述基于PICOS的目标进行了描述性总结。
最终纳入的13项研究样本来自六个国家,涵盖1411908名儿童和青少年。大多数研究(N = 10;76.9%)将等效球镜度(SER)为-0.5屈光度或更低作为近视的通用定义。大多数测量屏幕使用时间的研究(77.8%)发现,与疫情前相比,新冠疫情期间的屏幕使用时间更长,但只有一项研究采用了屏幕使用时间的客观测量方法。样本的平均批判性评价得分仅为66.1%,相当数量的研究未能识别和调整潜在的混杂因素。
未来的研究应考虑采用新出现的客观且经过验证的风险因素测量方法,考虑潜在的先验混杂因素和协变量,并确保样本的社会人口构成具有更强的代表性。