Nursing
home residents not getting regular eye care
Newswise — Two-thirds of
nursing home residents in a new UAB (University
of Alabama at Birmingham) study had no record of
or reference to an eye examination in their
medical charts, although more than half were
visually impaired. In findings published in the
July issue of Archives of Ophthalmology, UAB
researchers examined 380 residents of 17
Birmingham-area nursing homes.
Fifty-seven percent of the
residents were visually impaired, with visual
acuity worse than 20/40 in the better eye. Older
adults living in the community typically have a
visual impairment rate between 10 and 20
percent. Three-fourths of the participants had
abnormal binocular contrast sensitivity, or the
ability to detect boundaries between objects and
changes in brightness, which is important for
mobility and reading.
“It appears that routine
eye care may not be taking place for a
substantial segment of the nursing home
residents in our sample,” said Cynthia Owsley,
Ph.D., M.S.P.H., professor in the Department of
Ophthalmology at UAB and the study’s lead
author.
“Although 90 percent of the
residents had some form of health insurance, 66
percent of them had no reference to eye
examinations in their medical records. When
asked about their most recent eye exam, 28
percent said it was in the previous year, 20
percent indicated that it was more than two
years ago and one-third did not know.”
Previous studies have
estimated that nursing home residents have
visual impairment rates anywhere from three to
15 times higher than adults of the same age
living in the community, according to Owsley.
The reasons may include
attitudes among families and healthcare
providers that persons with vision
impairment do not benefit from treatments
that improve vision, increased nursing home
admission for those with visual impairment
and a shortage of eye care professionals who
routinely provide services for nursing home
resident
“Previous studies have
estimated that 37 percent of the visual
impairment and 20 percent of the blindness among
nursing home residents is correctable through
proper eye care,” Owsley said. “These findings
underscore the need to better understand the
causes of high visual impairment rates in
nursing home residents and to evaluate
interventions to improve the visual status of
this population.”
This research was supported
by the Retirement Research Foundation, the
EyeSight Foundation of Alabama, the Pearle
Vision Foundation, a National Institutes of
Health grant and Research to Prevent Blindness,
Inc. Dr. Owsley is a senior scientist for
Research to Prevent Blindness.