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Self-reported visual difficulties in Europe and related factors: a European population-based cross-sectional survey.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

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Authors

Marillet, Simon 
Braithwaite, Tasanee 
Ingrand, Pierre 

Abstract

PURPOSE: There is a relative paucity of self-reported vision problems data in European countries. METHODS: In this context, we investigated self-reported vision problems through European Health Interview Survey 2, a cross-sectional European population survey based on a standardized questionnaire including 147 medical, demographic and socioeconomic variables applied to non-institutionalized individuals aged 15 years or more in 28 European countries, in addition to Iceland and Norway. RESULTS: The survey included 311 386 individuals (54.18% women), with overall crude prevalence of self-reported vision problems of 2.07% [95% CI; 2.01-2.14]. Among them, 1.70 % [1.61-1.78] of men, 2.41% [2.31-2.51] of women and 4.71% [4.53-4.89] of individuals aged 60 or more reported to have a lot of vision problems or to be not able to see. The frequency of self-reported vision problems was the highest in Eastern European countries with values of 2.43% [2.30-2.56]. In multivariate analyses, limiting long-standing illness, depression, daily smoking, lack of physical activity, lower educational level and social isolation were associated with self-reported vision problems with ORs of 2.66 [2.42-2.92], 2.16 [2.01-2.32], 1.11 [1.01-1.23], 1.31 [1.21-1.42], 1.29 [1.19-1.40] and 1.45 [1.26-1.67], respectively, while higher income was associated with less self-reported vision problems with OR of 0.80 [0.73-0.86]. CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrated inequalities in terms of prevalence of self-reported vision problems in Europe, with higher prevalence in Eastern European countries and among women and older individuals.

Description

Keywords

Europe, associated factors, epidemiology, ophthalmology, prevalence, vision impairment, vision loss, Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Cross-Sectional Studies, Educational Status, Europe, Female, Health Surveys, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prevalence, Retrospective Studies, Risk Assessment, Risk Factors, Self Report, Socioeconomic Factors, Vision Disorders, Visual Acuity, Young Adult

Journal Title

Acta Ophthalmol

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1755-375X
1755-3768

Volume Title

99

Publisher

Wiley
Sponsorship
European Commission (EUROVISION research program H2020‐EU.1.3.2, University Pierre et Marie Curie)