Baker R S, Watkins N L, Wilson M R, Bazargan M, Flowers C W
Division of Ophthalmology, Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science, Los Angeles, California 90059, USA.
Ophthalmology. 1998 Aug;105(8):1373-9. doi: 10.1016/S0161-6420(98)98015-0.
This study aims to describe the clinical and sociodemographic characteristics of patients with diabetes who are newly presenting to an inner city public hospital eye clinic. This study also aims to determine the prevalence and severity of ocular morbidity in this population at time presentation and to assess the adequacy of the ophthalmic surveillance to which this population was exposed before presentation.
A clinic-based, cross-sectional study.
A total of 118 consecutive patients with diabetes participated.
During a 2-month interval, all patients with diabetes newly presenting to the Los Angeles County King-Drew Medical Center eye clinic were recruited who were at risk for diabetic eye complications according to American Diabetes Association criteria. Each patient underwent a standardized interviewer-administered questionnaire and a comprehensive ophthalmic examination.
Of the 118 patients, 65 (55%) were Hispanic and 51 (43%) were African American. Forty-six percent had a grade school education or less, 91% were unemployed, and 64% had no health insurance. Type two diabetes was predominant (91%), including 24 (22%) of new onset. Thirty-six patients with diabetes (31%) reported duration of diabetes greater than 10 years at time of presentation. At time of presentation, 62% had clinically apparent ophthalmic disease, whereas 40% had advanced ocular disease, including 6.8% of the sample that were legally blind. Sixty-nine patients (58.5%) reported never having had a dilated fundus examination, whereas 31 (63%) of the 49 patients reporting a previous dilated examination were last examined more than 2 years before presentation. Timing of ophthalmic examination was classified as appropriate for 38 patients (32%), marginal for 20 patients (17%), and inappropriate for 60 patients (51%).
In the setting of an inner city county hospital eye clinic, where the patient population is predominately minority and of low socioeconomic status, ophthalmic surveillance of high-risk patients with diabetes is inadequate and advanced disease often is present at initial presentation. Strategies must be developed to increase the routine use of eye services within this population.
本研究旨在描述初诊于市中心公立医院眼科门诊的糖尿病患者的临床和社会人口学特征。本研究还旨在确定该人群初诊时眼部疾病的患病率和严重程度,并评估该人群在就诊前接受的眼科监测是否充分。
一项基于门诊的横断面研究。
共有118例连续的糖尿病患者参与。
在2个月的时间间隔内,招募所有初诊于洛杉矶县国王德鲁医疗中心眼科门诊且根据美国糖尿病协会标准有糖尿病眼部并发症风险的糖尿病患者。每位患者均接受了由标准化访员管理的问卷调查和全面的眼科检查。
118例患者中,65例(55%)为西班牙裔,51例(43%)为非裔美国人。46%的患者接受过小学或以下教育,91%的患者失业,64%的患者没有医疗保险。2型糖尿病占主导(91%),其中24例(22%)为新发。36例糖尿病患者(31%)报告初诊时糖尿病病程超过10年。初诊时,62%的患者有临床明显的眼科疾病,而40%的患者有晚期眼部疾病,包括6.8%的样本为法定失明。69例患者(58.5%)报告从未接受过散瞳眼底检查,而在49例报告曾接受过散瞳检查的患者中,31例(63%)最后一次检查是在就诊前2年多。眼科检查的时机被分类为:38例患者(32%)合适,20例患者(17%)边缘,60例患者(51%)不合适。
在市中心县医院眼科门诊,患者群体主要为少数族裔且社会经济地位较低,对高危糖尿病患者的眼科监测不足,初诊时往往已有晚期疾病。必须制定策略以增加该人群对眼科服务的常规使用。