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    J Am Geriatr Soc. 2006 Nov;54(11):1713-8.

    Disparities between ambient, standard lighting and retinal acuities in community-dwelling older people: Implications for disability.

    Source

    Department of Behavioral and Community Health Sciences, Graduate School of Public Health, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15261, USA. smalbert@pitt.edu

    Abstract

    OBJECTIVES:

    To examine three types of visual ability-ambient acuity, standard lighting acuity, and retinal acuity-and their relationship with self-reported disability.

    DESIGN:

    Cross-sectional prevalence survey.

    SETTING:

    New York, New York.

    PARTICIPANTS:

    Community-dwelling older people.

    MEASUREMENTS:

    Ambient acuity assessed using a near reading card; standard lighting acuity and retinal acuity assessed using the Retinal Acuity Meter. Difficulty in activities of daily living was assessed according to self-report.

    RESULTS:

    Mean logMAR acuities were 0.44 (20/56) for ambient acuity, 0.33 (20/44) for standard lighting acuity, and 0.19 (20/31) for retinal acuity (all pairwise differences, P < .001). Given the distribution of disability by ambient acuity in this sample, improving ambient acuity to the level of retinal acuity could potentially reduce self-care disability 22%.

    CONCLUSION:

    Better utilization of retinal acuity through optimal ophthalmologic care and improvement in lighting would likely reduce disability in older adults.

    PMID:
    17087698
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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