Visual impairment, severe visual impairment, and blindness in children in Britain (BCVIS2): a national observational study. (March 2021)
- Record Type:
- Journal Article
- Title:
- Visual impairment, severe visual impairment, and blindness in children in Britain (BCVIS2): a national observational study. (March 2021)
- Main Title:
- Visual impairment, severe visual impairment, and blindness in children in Britain (BCVIS2): a national observational study
- Authors:
- Teoh, Lucinda J
Solebo, Ameenat Lola
Rahi, Jugnoo S
Abbott, Joe
Abdullah, Wajda
Adams, Gill
Allen, Louise
Anderson, Christopher
Ansell, Karen
Anwar, Samira
Ash, Isabel
Ashworth, Jane
Aslam, Sher
Astagi, Majunath
Ball, Colin
Balu, Rajesh
Barrett, Victoria
Bassi, Zahabiyah
Bates, Adam
Batra, Dushyant
Bell, Sarah
Belmour, Linda
Benzimra, James
Birrell, Ginny
Biswas, Susmito
Blaikie, Andrew
Blundell, Michael
Bolton, Kate
Bos, Ewoud
Bowen, Pamela
Bowman, Richard
Boyle, Natalie
Bradbury, John
Bredow, Maria
Bregu, Marsel
Brennan, Nicholas
Brennan, Rosie
Brittain, Paul
Buchanan, Charles
Bunce, Catey
Bunting, Howard
Burgess, Priscilla
Burke, Cathie
Bush, Alexandra Kate
Butcher, Jeremy
Butler, Lucilla
Cane, Clare
Chadwick, Cathryn
Charlton, Ruth
Childs, Anne-Marie
Choi, Jessy
Choleva, Vivi
Churchill, Amanda
Clarke, Michael
Clayton, Peter
Clifford, Luke
Connor, Alan
Cox, Rachel
Cresswell, Lyn
Dahlmann-Noor, Annegret
D'Amore, Angela
Dattani, Mehul
Dean, Fiona
Devlin, Anita
Dhir, Luna
Doherty, Cora
Dorey, Suzanne
Drimmie, Fiona
Duke, Tina
Dutton, Gordon
Eaton, Fiona
Eaton, Megan
Eckersley, Danielle
Edelsten, Clive
Elderkin, Rachel
Ennis, Julia
Escardo-Paton, Julia
Estephen, Ziad
Etuwewe, Onajite
Evans, Anthony
Ezekwe, Adjoa
Fairfield, Jenny
Falzon, Kevin
Ferguson, Allison
Fleck, Brian
Gainsborough, Mary
Galloway, Alexandra
Gerson-Sofer, Naomi
Gibbon, Caspar
Gibson, Patricia
Goss, Kevin
Graham-Evans, Katherine
Gray, Judith
Gregory, Anna
Gulati, Arun
Gurtin-Zorkun, Deniz
Guy, Emma
Haddad, Diab
Haggerty, Helen
Haigh, Paul
Hale, Julia
Hamada, Samer
Hancox, Joanne
Hanna, Kerry
Harris, Sian
Harrison, Christine
Harvey, Phillip
Headland, Sophie
Heath, Dominic
Heaton, Paul
Henderson, Robert
Hingorani, Melanie
Hirst, Zoe
Hogg, Claire
Hogler, Wolfgang
Holden, Roger
Hoole, Janice
Horridge, Karen
Howard, Delyth
Howells, Rachel
Irvine, Vanessa
Irving, Clare
Johnson, Nicola
Johnston, Ian
Jollands, Alice
Jones, David
Joseph, Annie
Joshi, Archana
Kandaswamy, Pugazhvendan
Kattakayam, Charles
Keenan, Joseph
Kelly, Anne
Kersey, James
Khan, Awais
Khaw, Peng
Kipioti, Tina
Kiran, Sadia
Kneen, Lesley
Kotagiri, Ajay
Kulshrestha, Richa
Lambley, Rosemary
Lavy, Tim
Lawson, Joanna
Lee, Vicki
Leitch, Jane
Lennon, Julie
Lipshen, Gabi
Lloyd, Chris
Loftus, John
Lomas, Tom
Long, Vernon
Mackinnon, Jane
MacRae, Mary
Mahmood, Usman
Maino, Anna
Maling, Sarah
Mansfield, David
Marder, Elizabeth
Markham, Richard
Marr, Jane
Marsh, Catherine
Maw, Anna
McCartney, Eleanor
McCullagh, Helen
McDonald, Anna
McPhee, Derek
Miall, Lawrence
Mistry, Shila
Moate, Benjamin
Mohan, Meyyammai
Moore, Helen
Moore, Will
Morgan, Nicola
Morton, Claire
Mulvihill, Alan
Nair, Ranjit
Newman, Bill
Nitsch, Christiane
O'Connell, Katy
Oluonye, Ngozi
Pai, Vittaldas
Palmer, Helen
Papadopoulos, Maria
Parkinson, Shelagh
Parmar, Bina
Parulekar, Manoj
Parvathareddy, Madhavi
Patel, Dipesh
Patel, Himanshu
Patel, Kamal
Pennefather, Philippa
Petrone, Flaudia
Pierrepoint, Marcus
Pilling, Rachel
Pollard, Sally
Puertas, Renata
Pysden, Karen
Quinn, Anthony
Quinn, Philip
Rachdan, Diyaa
Raina, Jyoti
Rajak, Saul
Ramm, Laura
Rands, Catherine
Rao, Tekki
Ray, Mary
Reddy, Ashwin
Reilly, Sheilla
Rekha, Maralla
Richardson, Greg
Riordan, Andrew
Roberts, Nerys
Robertson, Helen
Robinson, Gillian
Rogers, Neil
Saeed, Shakir
Salmon, Caroline
Sargent, Jenefer
Sarvananthan, Nagini
Schmoll, Conrad
Self, James
Sellar, P
Service, Elaine
Shafiq, Ayad
Shah, Shilpa
Sharma, Vinod
Sharp, Jemima
Shaw, Julia
Shenoy, Manjula
Sleep, Tamsin
Smit, Elisa
Smyth, Katherine
Speedwell, Lynne
Spowart, Katherine
Standring, P
Stanga, Paulo
Stanley, Alison
Stanton, Alan
Steel, David
Stephen, John
Stewart, Catherine
Street, Jessica
Stucke, Sally
Sutherland, Shona
Tambe, Katya
Tandon, Anamika
Tappin, Alison
Taylor, Kate
Taylor, Robert
Teasdale, Katherine
Theodorou, Maria
Thomas, Gareth
Thomas, Megan
Thomas, Paula
Thompson, Dorothy
Thomson, Stephen
Thopte, Indrajit
Tiffin, Peter
Tillett, Angela
Traunecker, Heidi
Tsimpida, Maria
Van Someren, Vivienne
Venkatesh, Udupa
Vermaak, Zoe
Vincent, Michael
Walker, David
Walker, Simon
Walsh, Deidre
Walters, Bronwyn
Ward Platt, Martin
Watson, Louise
Watts, Patrick
West, Siobhan
West, Stephanie
White, Cathy
White, Joy
Whitlingum, Gabriel
Williams, Cathy
Wilne, Sophie
Wilson, Janice
Wong, Chien
Woodbridge, Tamsin
Wright, Paul
Wyles, Martha
Wylie, Philip
… (more) - Abstract:
- Summary: Background: The WHO VISION 2020 global initiative against blindness, launched in 2000, prioritised childhood visual disability by aiming to end avoidable childhood blindness by 2020. However, progress has been hampered by the global paucity of epidemiological data concerning childhood visual disability. The British Childhood Visual Impairment and Blindness Study 2 (BCVIS2) was done to address this evidence gap. Methods: BCVIS2 was a prospective UK-wide, cross-sectional, observational study to establish an inception cohort of children newly diagnosed with visual impairment. Ophthalmologists and paediatricians reported cases from 89 hospitals and community centres across the UK. We included children aged 18 years or younger who were newly diagnosed with any condition causing impaired visual acuity to a level of 0·5 logMAR or worse (worse than 6/18 Snellen) in each eye, or equivalent vision as assessed by standard qualitative measures, between Oct 1, 2015, and Nov 1, 2016. Eligible children were notified simultaneously but independently by their managing ophthalmologists and paediatricians via the two national active surveillance schemes, the British Ophthalmological Surveillance Unit and the British Paediatric Surveillance Unit. Standardised detailed demographic, socioeconomic, and clinical data about detection, management, and treatment were collected at diagnosis and 1 year later. We calculated incidence estimates and relative rates by key sociodemographic factors.Summary: Background: The WHO VISION 2020 global initiative against blindness, launched in 2000, prioritised childhood visual disability by aiming to end avoidable childhood blindness by 2020. However, progress has been hampered by the global paucity of epidemiological data concerning childhood visual disability. The British Childhood Visual Impairment and Blindness Study 2 (BCVIS2) was done to address this evidence gap. Methods: BCVIS2 was a prospective UK-wide, cross-sectional, observational study to establish an inception cohort of children newly diagnosed with visual impairment. Ophthalmologists and paediatricians reported cases from 89 hospitals and community centres across the UK. We included children aged 18 years or younger who were newly diagnosed with any condition causing impaired visual acuity to a level of 0·5 logMAR or worse (worse than 6/18 Snellen) in each eye, or equivalent vision as assessed by standard qualitative measures, between Oct 1, 2015, and Nov 1, 2016. Eligible children were notified simultaneously but independently by their managing ophthalmologists and paediatricians via the two national active surveillance schemes, the British Ophthalmological Surveillance Unit and the British Paediatric Surveillance Unit. Standardised detailed demographic, socioeconomic, and clinical data about detection, management, and treatment were collected at diagnosis and 1 year later. We calculated incidence estimates and relative rates by key sociodemographic factors. We did descriptive analyses of underlying ophthalmic disorders and non-ophthalmic comorbidities. Findings: 61 (7%) of 845 eligible children initially notified were ineligible at follow-up because of improved vision after treatment. Thus, the study sample comprised 784 children with permanent newly-diagnosed all-cause visual impairment, severe visual impairment, or blindness. 559 (72%) of 778 children had clinically significant non-ophthalmic impairments or conditions. 28 (4%) of 784 children died within a year after diagnosis of visual disability (all had underlying systemic disorders). Incidence of visual disability in the first year of life was 5·19 per 10 000 children (95% CI 4·71–5·72), almost ten times higher than among 1-to-4-year-olds and between 20 times and 100 times higher than in the older age groups. The overall cumulative incidence (or lifetime risk) of visual impairment, severe visual impairment, or blindness was 10·03 per 10 000 children (9·35–10·76). Incidence rates were higher for those from any ethnic minority group, the lowest quintile of socioeconomic status, and those born preterm or with low birthweight. 345 (44%) of 784 children had a single affected anatomical site. Disorders of the brain and visual pathways affected 378 (48%) of 784 children. Interpretation: BCVIS2 provides a contemporary snapshot of the heterogeneity, multi-morbidity, and vulnerability associated with childhood visual disability in a high-income country. These findings could facilitate developing and delivering health care and planning of interventional research. Our findings highlight the importance of including childhood visual disability as a sentinel event and metric in global child health initiatives. Funding: Fight for Sight, National Institute for Health Research, and Ulverscroft Foundation. … (more)
- Is Part Of:
- Lancet. Volume 5:Number 3(2021)
- Journal:
- Lancet
- Issue:
- Volume 5:Number 3(2021)
- Issue Display:
- Volume 5, Issue 3 (2021)
- Year:
- 2021
- Volume:
- 5
- Issue:
- 3
- Issue Sort Value:
- 2021-0005-0003-0000
- Page Start:
- 190
- Page End:
- 200
- Publication Date:
- 2021-03
- Subjects:
- Pediatrics -- Periodicals
Children -- Health and hygiene -- Periodicals
Adolescent medicine -- Periodicals
Teenagers -- Health and hygiene -- Periodicals
618.920005 - Journal URLs:
- http://www.sciencedirect.com/ ↗
https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/the-lancet-child-and-adolescent-health/issues ↗ - DOI:
- 10.1016/S2352-4642(20)30366-7 ↗
- Languages:
- English
- ISSNs:
- 2352-4642
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- Legaldeposit
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