Impact of spectacles wear on uncorrected visual acuity among urban migrant primary school children in China: a cluster-randomised clinical trial

ObjectiveTo estimate the effect of providing free spectacles on uncorrected visual acuity (VA) among urban migrant Chinese school children.DesignExploratory analysis from a parallel cluster-randomised clinical trial.MethodsAfter baseline survey and VA screening, eligible children were randomised by...

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Veröffentlicht in:British journal of ophthalmology 2021-06, Vol.105 (6), p.761-767
Hauptverfasser: Zhang, Xinwu, Zhou, Ming, Ma, Xiaochen, Yi, Hongmei, Zhang, Haiqing, Wang, Xiuqin, Jin, Ling, Naidoo, Kovin, Minto, Hasan, Zou, Haidong, Rozelle, Scott, Congdon, Nathan, Ma, Yue
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:ObjectiveTo estimate the effect of providing free spectacles on uncorrected visual acuity (VA) among urban migrant Chinese school children.DesignExploratory analysis from a parallel cluster-randomised clinical trial.MethodsAfter baseline survey and VA screening, eligible children were randomised by school to receive one of the two interventions: free glasses and a teacher incentive (tablet computer if ≥80% of children given glasses were wearing them on un-announced examination) (treatment group) or glasses prescription and letter to parents (control group). The primary outcome was uncorrected logarithm of the minimal angle of resolution (LogMAR) VA at study closeout, adjusted for baseline uncorrected VA.ResultsAmong 4376 randomly selected children, 728 (16.6%, mean age 10.9 years, 51.0% boys) at 94 schools failed VA screening and met eligibility criteria. Of these, 358 children (49.2%) at 47 schools were randomised to treatment and 370 children (50.8%) at 47 schools to control. Among these, 679 children (93.3%) completed follow-up and underwent analysis. Spectacle wear in the treatment and control groups was 68.3% and 29.3% (p
ISSN:0007-1161
1468-2079
DOI:10.1136/bjophthalmol-2020-316213