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Race, poverty, and the lack of follow-up for Arkansas students that fail vision screenings: a cross-sectional study over 7 years.

Authors :
Ly, Victoria V.
Elhusseiny, Abdelrahman M.
Cannon, Thomas C.
Brown, Clare C.
Source :
Journal of AAPOS; Jun2023, Vol. 27 Issue 3, p129.e1-129.e6, 1p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

To analyze rates of follow-up eye care for students that failed school vision screenings over a 7-year period in 238 Arkansas school districts. In this cross-sectional study, vision screening, demographic, socioeconomic, academic, and eye care provider data were collected. The main outcomes were referral rates, rates of follow-up eye care for students with failed vision screenings, and estimated associations between the rate of follow-up and school district and county-level characteristics, such as race, poverty, insurance coverage, academic achievement, and the number of eye care providers. A total of 1,744,805 vision screenings over 7 academic years (2013-2020) were included. The average screening rate was 35.4% across the study years. The screening failure rate ranged from 8.0% to 9.4%. Two-thirds of districts had a follow-up rate between 20% and 50%. 91% had follow-up rates of <60%. School districts with higher concentrations of White students (P < 0.001), higher graduation rates (P = 0.024), higher percentages of students on government-assisted insurance (P = 0.035), and higher standardized scores (P < 0.001) had higher rates of follow-up. There were no statistically significant relationships between the rate of follow-up eye care and the number of school nurses per school district or the number of ophthalmologists or optometrists per county. Arkansas children in our study cohort that failed vision screenings had inadequate follow-up eye care. Follow-up rates were associated with several key indicators of socioeconomic status.▪ [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10918531
Volume :
27
Issue :
3
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Journal of AAPOS
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
164459028
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaapos.2023.02.005