@article{28591, keywords = {Visually Impaired Persons, Visual Acuity, Vision Disorders, South Africa, Sickness Impact Profile, Rural Population, Quality of Life, Psychometrics, Middle Aged, Male, Humans, Health Status, Female, Aged, 80 and over, Aged, Adult, Adolescent}, author = {Briesen S and Roberts H and Finger R}, title = {The impact of visual impairment on health-related quality of life in rural Africa.}, abstract = {
PURPOSE: To assess the impact of visual impairment (VI) on utility values in Sub-Saharan Africa and compare findings with other studies from low- and high-income countries.
METHODS: Patients with normal vision and various levels of VI were recruited from a secondary eye clinic in rural Kenya and interviewed using time trade-off (TTO). VI was classified using the World Health Organization definition of (normal vision, visual acuity ≥20/60, VI 20/80-20/200, severe VI 20/240-20/400, and blindness <20/400).
RESULTS: Mean age of the total sample (N = 303) was 50.3 years (standard deviation, SD, ±18.17 years), and 51.5% of patients were male. Most were small-scale farmers and illiteracy was high at 40%. Mean TTO scores per group were: normal vision 0.93 (SD ± 0.10), VI 0.88 (SD ± 0.14), severe VI 0.86 (SD ± 0.13), blindness 0.73 (SD ± 0.17; p ≤ 0.001). Lower TTO scores were independently associated with worse visual acuity (p ≤ 0.001), longer duration of disease (p ≤ 0.001) and illiteracy (p = 0.011), but not with cause of VI, age, sex, marital status, socioeconomic status, or systemic comorbidities in multivariate analyses. Overall, TTO scores were considerably higher than those reported from high-income countries at similar levels of VI.
CONCLUSION: In this rural African population, duration and extent of vision loss, rather than cause, socioeconomic factors and comorbidities affected vision-related quality of life. Our findings underline the importance of providing sight-restoring treatment as timely as possible and the necessity of enhancing rehabilitation efforts for those with non-curable eye diseases.
}, year = {2014}, journal = {Ophthalmic epidemiology}, volume = {21}, pages = {297-306}, issn = {1744-5086}, doi = {10.3109/09286586.2014.950281}, language = {eng}, }