TY - JOUR
T1 - Predictors of adequate correction following vision screening failure
AU - Manny, Ruth E.
AU - Sinnott, Loraine T.
AU - Jones-Jordan, Lisa A.
AU - Messer, Dawn
AU - Twelker, J. Daniel
AU - Cotter, Susan A.
AU - Kleinstein, Robert N.
AU - Crescioni, Mabel
PY - 2012/6
Y1 - 2012/6
N2 - Purpose. To determine whether compliance with referral 1 year after vision screening failure was associated with care model, demographic, or ocular factors. Methods. Data were analyzed from 798 children in the Collaborative Longitudinal Evaluation of Ethnicity and Refractive Error Study with habitual logMAR visual acuity (VA) 0.26 (20/40 + 2 or worse) in either eye due to uncorrected or undercorrected refractive error and who returned the following year. The parents of 492 children failing in TX and CA were sent letters indicating the need for a complete vision examination (screening model), while 306 children seen primarily in AZ and AL received a free complete examination and eyeglasses if needed (complete care model). Presenting to follow-up with adequate correction (logMAR <0.26) in each eye was considered compliant. Logistic regression models for compliance were fit to assess whether care model, ethnicity, sex, age, uncorrected logMAR in the better eye, or parental income, education, or myopia were predictors. Results. Overall compliance was 28%. Age [p = 0.01, odds ratio (OR) = 1.12] and uncorrected logMAR (p < 0.001, OR = 1.13) were associated with compliance but care model, ethnicity, and sex were not. Among the 447 children for whom data on parental factors were available, 27% were compliant. In this model, age, ethnicity, sex, parental income, parental education, and parental myopia were not associated with compliance, but uncorrected logMAR (p = 0.005; OR = 1.13) was predictive. An interaction between unaided VA and care model predicted improved compliance with poorer unaided VA in the complete care model. Conclusions. Expensive complete care screening programs may not improve compliance over typical notification and referral screening protocols in school-aged children, unless unaided VA is worse than the common 20/40 referral criteria. Unaided VA had less impact on predicted compliance in the screening-only protocol.
AB - Purpose. To determine whether compliance with referral 1 year after vision screening failure was associated with care model, demographic, or ocular factors. Methods. Data were analyzed from 798 children in the Collaborative Longitudinal Evaluation of Ethnicity and Refractive Error Study with habitual logMAR visual acuity (VA) 0.26 (20/40 + 2 or worse) in either eye due to uncorrected or undercorrected refractive error and who returned the following year. The parents of 492 children failing in TX and CA were sent letters indicating the need for a complete vision examination (screening model), while 306 children seen primarily in AZ and AL received a free complete examination and eyeglasses if needed (complete care model). Presenting to follow-up with adequate correction (logMAR <0.26) in each eye was considered compliant. Logistic regression models for compliance were fit to assess whether care model, ethnicity, sex, age, uncorrected logMAR in the better eye, or parental income, education, or myopia were predictors. Results. Overall compliance was 28%. Age [p = 0.01, odds ratio (OR) = 1.12] and uncorrected logMAR (p < 0.001, OR = 1.13) were associated with compliance but care model, ethnicity, and sex were not. Among the 447 children for whom data on parental factors were available, 27% were compliant. In this model, age, ethnicity, sex, parental income, parental education, and parental myopia were not associated with compliance, but uncorrected logMAR (p = 0.005; OR = 1.13) was predictive. An interaction between unaided VA and care model predicted improved compliance with poorer unaided VA in the complete care model. Conclusions. Expensive complete care screening programs may not improve compliance over typical notification and referral screening protocols in school-aged children, unless unaided VA is worse than the common 20/40 referral criteria. Unaided VA had less impact on predicted compliance in the screening-only protocol.
KW - compliance
KW - optical correction
KW - refractive error
KW - school children
KW - vision screening
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U2 - 10.1097/OPX.0b013e318255da73
DO - 10.1097/OPX.0b013e318255da73
M3 - Article
C2 - 22544001
AN - SCOPUS:84861807572
SN - 1040-5488
VL - 89
SP - 892
EP - 900
JO - Optometry and Vision Science
JF - Optometry and Vision Science
IS - 6
ER -