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澳大利亚原住民和非原住民屈光不正的患病率:系统评价与荟萃分析。

Prevalence of refractive error in Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

作者信息

Nejatian Marcel, Bhat Saiuj, Kalantary Amy, Taylor Joshua, Chia Mark A, Turner Angus, Razavi Hessom

机构信息

Lions Eye Institute, Nedlands, Western Australia, Australia

University of Western Australia Centre for Ophthalmology and Visual Science, Perth, Western Australia, Australia.

出版信息

BMJ Open Ophthalmol. 2025 Aug 24;10(1):e002046. doi: 10.1136/bmjophth-2024-002046.

Abstract

AIMS

This study aimed to compare the prevalence of (1) presenting vision loss from refractive error, (2) subtypes of refractive error and (3) rates of spectacle coverage and use between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians in urban and rural locations.

METHODS

Joanna Briggs Institute guidance for systematic reviews of prevalence studies was followed. Medline, Embase, Web of Science and relevant grey literature were searched. All studies reporting refractive error prevalence in Australian populations were included. Pooled prevalence estimates were derived using meta-analyses with a random-effects model.

RESULTS

17 studies were included (22 450 adults and 13 493 children). Pooled prevalence of bilateral distance vision loss from refractive error was 7.5% (95% CI, 4.6% to 11.1%) and 4.5% (95% CI, 2.7% to 6.8%) among Indigenous and non-Indigenous adults, respectively (p=0.126). Bilateral blindness occurred in 0.19% (95% CI, 0.00% to 0.75%) and 0.01% (95% CI, 0.00% to 0.09%) of Indigenous and non-Indigenous adults, respectively (p=0.265). Myopia, astigmatism and anisometropia were similar among Indigenous and non-Indigenous children (6.2% vs 5.3% (p=0.750), 5.2% vs 5.6% (p=0.928) and 4.1% vs 5.0% (p=0.661), respectively). Narrative synthesis of studies suggested Indigenous people had lower spectacle coverage and lower use of the spectacles they owned.

CONCLUSIONS

Vision loss from refractive error is common in Australia, with Indigenous people particularly affected by lower spectacle coverage and use. National strategies for addressing this should be considered, such as the national spectacle subsidy scheme.

PROSPERO REGISTRATION NUMBER

CRD42022340197.

摘要

目的

本研究旨在比较(1)屈光不正导致的视力下降患病率、(2)屈光不正亚型以及(3)城市和农村地区澳大利亚原住民与非原住民之间眼镜佩戴率和使用率。

方法

遵循乔安娜·布里格斯研究所关于患病率研究系统评价的指南。检索了医学期刊数据库(Medline)、荷兰医学文摘数据库(Embase)、科学引文索引数据库(Web of Science)及相关灰色文献。纳入所有报告澳大利亚人群屈光不正患病率的研究。采用随机效应模型进行荟萃分析得出合并患病率估计值。

结果

纳入17项研究(22450名成年人和13493名儿童)。原住民和非原住民成年人中,屈光不正导致的双眼远距离视力下降合并患病率分别为7.5%(95%可信区间,4.6%至11.1%)和4.5%(95%可信区间,2.7%至6.8%)(p = 0.126)。原住民和非原住民成年人中双眼失明发生率分别为0.19%(95%可信区间,0.00%至0.75%)和0.01%(95%可信区间,0.00%至0.09%)(p = 0.265)。原住民和非原住民儿童近视、散光和屈光参差情况相似(分别为6.2%对5.3%(p = 0.750)、5.2%对5.6%(p = 0.928)和4.1%对5.0%(p = 0.661))。对研究进行叙述性综合分析表明,原住民眼镜佩戴率较低,且所拥有眼镜的使用率也较低。

结论

屈光不正导致的视力下降在澳大利亚很常见,原住民尤其受到眼镜佩戴率和使用率较低的影响。应考虑制定全国性应对策略,如全国眼镜补贴计划。

国际前瞻性系统评价注册编号

CRD42022340197。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/47f7/12382565/25b43dc7142e/bmjophth-10-1-g001.jpg

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