Visual impairment in a rural Appalachian community: prevalence and causes
Article Abstract:
The nature and extent of visual disability in an underserved area of rural United States were assessed by surveying 1,136 subjects aged 40 years and older from a rural region of Kentucky. Information about corrected visual acuity or sharpness, history of eye evaluations, demographic and socioeconomic factors, and use of health care services was collected. Subjects with visual acuity of less than 20/60 in either eye were given a complete eye exam. Binocular blindness, defined as an acuity of less than 20/400 in the better eye, was present in 0.44 percent of subjects. Monocular blindness, defined as an acuity of less than 20/400 in one eye, occurred in 3.3 percent of subjects. The prevalence of binocular and monocular blindness in this rural population was almost twice that of the national population. Impairment of bilateral vision in men was due to degeneration of the macula, the opaque spot of the cornea, which is the clear, transparent front coating of the eye. The loss of bilateral visual acuity among women was due to the development of cataracts, or opacity of the lens of the eye. Impairment of monocular vision or decreased sight in one eye was due to the development of cataracts, injury, and amblyopia in both sexes. Impairment of vision was associated with older age, a low level of education, and the lack of active employment, access to a health care facility, and comprehensive health insurance coverage. (Consumer Summary produced by Reliance Medical Information, Inc.)
Publication Name: JAMA, The Journal of the American Medical Association
Subject: Health
ISSN: 0098-7484
Year: 1990
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
Bloodstream infections associated with a needleless intravenous infusion system in patients receiving home infusion therapy
Article Abstract:
Patients receiving home infusion therapy with a needleless device for total parenteral nutrition and intralipid therapy may be at considerable risk for blood stream infections. Researchers compared the health and the care 250 patients of Rhode Island Home Therapeutics who had received home infusion therapy through either a peripheral catheter or a needleless central venous catheter (CVC). Culture specimens were obtained from injection caps from the needless devices. Patients who had a CVC showed a greater risk of contracting bloodstream infections than controls. Researchers suspected that solutions remaining in the injection cap became contaminated during the period before the caps were changed.
Publication Name: JAMA, The Journal of the American Medical Association
Subject: Health
ISSN: 0098-7484
Year: 1995
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
Acute Onset of Decreased Vision and Hearing Traced to Hemodialysis Treatment With Aged Dialyzers
Article Abstract:
Old cellulose acetate dialyzers were probably the cause of neurologic disease that developed in 7 patients within one day of receiving dialysis at one hospital. The outbreak occurred September 18, 1996, and the patients who developed the symptoms had been exposed to cellulose acetate dialyzers that were 11.5 years old. No patient who did not develop symptoms was exposed to the old dialyzer. Old dialyzer can contain harmful chemicals that can enter the blood. An extract of the old dialyzer caused similar symptoms in rabbits.
Publication Name: JAMA, The Journal of the American Medical Association
Subject: Health
ISSN: 0098-7484
Year: 2000
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
- Abstracts: Disparities in clinical laboratory performance for blood lead analysis. Predictors of smoking cessation in adolescents
- Abstracts: Medication in early pregnancy: prevalence of use and relationship to maternal characteristics. A systematic review and meta-analysis of prospective studies on the association between maternal cigarette smoking and preterm delivery
- Abstracts: Back pain in young athletes: significant differences from adults in causes and patterns. Workplace Toxic Exposures Involving Adolescents Aged 14 to 19 Years
- Abstracts: Osmotic lysis of tumor spill in ovarian cancer: a murine model. Ovarian cancer gene therapy: repeated treatment with thymidine kinase in an adenovirus vector and ganciclovir improves survival in a novel immunocompetent murine model
- Abstracts: Peritoneal serous papillary carcinoma, a phenotypic variant of familial ovarian cancer: implications for ovarian cancer screening