TY - JOUR
T1 - Blindness and Visual Impairment in an American Urban Population
T2 - The Baltimore Eye Survey
AU - Tielsch, James M.
AU - Sommer, Alfred
AU - Witt, Kathe
AU - Katz, Joanne
AU - Royall, Richard M.
PY - 1990/2
Y1 - 1990/2
N2 - Data on the prevalence of blindness and visual impairment in multiracial urban populations of the United States are not readily available. The Baltimore Eye Survey was designed to address this lack of information and provide estimates of prevalence in age-race subgroups that had not been well studied in the past. A population-based sample of 5300 blacks and whites from east Baltimore, Md, received an ophthalmologic screening examination that included detailed visual acuity measurements. Blacks had, on average, a twofold excess prevalence of blindness and visual impairment than whites, irrespective of definition. Rates rose dramatically with age for all definitions of vision loss, but there was no difference in prevalence by sex. More than 50% of subjects improved their presenting vision after refractive correction, with 7.5% improving three or more lines. Rates in Baltimore are as high or higher than those reported from previous studies. National projections indicate that greater than 3 million persons are visually impaired, 890 000 of whom are bilaterally blind by US definitions.
AB - Data on the prevalence of blindness and visual impairment in multiracial urban populations of the United States are not readily available. The Baltimore Eye Survey was designed to address this lack of information and provide estimates of prevalence in age-race subgroups that had not been well studied in the past. A population-based sample of 5300 blacks and whites from east Baltimore, Md, received an ophthalmologic screening examination that included detailed visual acuity measurements. Blacks had, on average, a twofold excess prevalence of blindness and visual impairment than whites, irrespective of definition. Rates rose dramatically with age for all definitions of vision loss, but there was no difference in prevalence by sex. More than 50% of subjects improved their presenting vision after refractive correction, with 7.5% improving three or more lines. Rates in Baltimore are as high or higher than those reported from previous studies. National projections indicate that greater than 3 million persons are visually impaired, 890 000 of whom are bilaterally blind by US definitions.
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U2 - 10.1001/archopht.1990.01070040138048
DO - 10.1001/archopht.1990.01070040138048
M3 - Article
C2 - 2271016
AN - SCOPUS:0025122263
SN - 0003-9950
VL - 108
SP - 286
EP - 290
JO - Archives of ophthalmology
JF - Archives of ophthalmology
IS - 2
ER -