A study on the prevalence of refractive errors among school children of 10-16 years in Surendranagar district, Gujarat

Authors

  • Ankita Parmar Department of Community Medicine, Parul Institute of Medical Sciences and Research, Vadodara, Gujarat, India
  • Girija Kartha Department of Community Medicine, C.U. Shah Medical College, Surendranagar, Gujarat, India
  • Manish Baria Department of Surgery, Medical College, Vadodara, Gujarat, India

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18203/2394-6040.ijcmph20173848

Keywords:

Refractive errors, school children, prevalence, symptoms, spectacles

Abstract

Background: Refractive error could be considered as an avoidable condition among various conditions leading to visual disabilities in children. Present study was conducted with the objective of estimating the prevalence of refractive errors among school children in Surendranagar district.

Methods: The study was conducted among the school going children of 10-16 years age group of Surendranagar district of Gujarat state. Total 600 students were examined from rural and urban schools of the district. The study was carried out through oral questionnaire method using pre-designed and pretested Performa followed by ocular examination.

Results: Overall prevalence of refractive errors was found to be 29.5%. Headache was the single most common symptom reported by 38.58% children. Nearly 36.54% boys and 36.98% girls had moderate visual impairment while 4.80% boys and 2.75% girls had severe visual impairment. Among the children having refractive errors 61.02% children did not use spectacles.

Conclusions: The study shows that children among 10-16 years are at risk of developing refractive errors and many of them are not aware of the refractive errors. 

Metrics

Metrics Loading ...

References

Dandona R, Dandona L. Refractive error blindness. Bull World Health Organ. 2001;79:237-43.

Murthy GV, Gupta SK, Ellwein LB, Munoz SR, Pokharel GP, Sanga L, et al. Refractive errors in children in an urban population in Delhi. Investigative Ophthalmol Visual Sci. 2002; 43: 623-31.

Dandona R, Dandona L, Srinivas M, Sahare P, Narsaiah S, Munoz SR, et al. Refractive error in children in a rural population in India. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci. 2002;43:615-22.

He M, Zeng J, Liu Y, Xu J, Pokharel GP, Ellwein LB. Refractive error and visual impairment in urban children in southern china. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci. 2004;45:793-9.

Odedra N, Wedner SH, Shigongo ZS, Nyalali K, Gilbert C. Barriers to Spectacle Use in Tanzanian Secondary School Students. Ophthalmic Epidemiol. 2008;15(6):410-7.

Congdon N, Zheng M, Sharma A, Choi K, Song Y, Zhang M, et al. Prevalence and determinants of spectacle nonwear among rural Chinese secondary schoolchildren: the Xichang Pediatric Refractive Error Study Report 3. Arch Ophthalmol. 2008;126:1717-23.

World Health Organization: International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems. 10th revision. Version 2003. Chapter VII. H54. Blindness and low vision. Available at: http://www.who.int/classifications/icd/en/. Accessed on 29th November 2016.

Gupta M, Gupta BP, Cauhan A, Bhardwaj A. Ocular morbidity prevalence among school children in Shimla. Indian J Ophthalmol. 2009;57:133-8.

Sethi S, Kartha GP. Prevalence of refractive errors in school children (12-17 years) of Ahmedabad City. Indian J Community Med. 2000;25:181–3.

Kalikivayi V, Naduvilath TJ, Bansal AK, Dandona L. Visual impairment in school children in Southern India. Indian J Ophthalmol. 1997;45:129–34

Deshpande JD, Malathi K. Prevalence of ocular morbidities among school children in rural area of north Maharashtra in India. National J Community Med. 2011;2:249-54.

Negrel AD, Maul E, Pokharel GP, Zhao J, Ellwein LB. Refractive Error Study in Children: sampling and measurement methods for a multi-country survey. Am J Ophthalmol. 2000;129:421-6.

Maul E, Barroso S, Munoz SR, Sperduto RD, Ellwein LB. Refractive Error Study in Children: results from La Florida, Chile. Am J Ophthalmol. 2000;129:445-54.

Wedner SH, Ross DA, Balira R, Kaji L, Foster A. Prevalence of eye diseases in primary school children in a rural area of Tanzania. Br J Ophthalmol. 2000;84:1291–7.

Singh H. Pattern of ocular morbidity in school children in central India. National J Community Med. 2011;2:430-31

Rahi JS, Gilbert CE, Foster A, Minassian D. Measuring the burden of childhood blindness. Br J Ophthalmol. 1999;83:387–8.

Prasanna BT, Kamath, GuruPrasad BS. Prevalence of ocular morbidity among school going children (6-15years) in rural area of Karnataka, South India. Int J Pharm Biomed Res. 2012;3:209-12.

Oluwatoyin HO, Adenike OA. Childhood Eye Diseases in South-western Nigeria. NCBI. 2009;64:947-51.

Venkatramana K, Naduvilam T. Visual impairment in school children in southern India. Ind J Opthalmol. 1997:129-34.

Tay MT et al. Myopic and educational attainment in young Singapore Males, Ann Acad Med, Singapore. 1992;21:785-91.

He M, Xu J, Yin W, Ellwein LB. Need and challenges of refractive correction in urban Chinese school children. Optom Vis Sci. 2005;82:229–34.

Downloads

Published

2017-08-23

How to Cite

Parmar, A., Kartha, G., & Baria, M. (2017). A study on the prevalence of refractive errors among school children of 10-16 years in Surendranagar district, Gujarat. International Journal Of Community Medicine And Public Health, 4(9), 3376–3379. https://doi.org/10.18203/2394-6040.ijcmph20173848

Issue

Section

Original Research Articles