Researchers aim for consensus on measuring
the impact of Visual Impairment
Newswise — New guidelines that outline best
practices for measuring the economic burden
of visual impairment will make it easier for
the policy, science and medical communities
to draw conclusions and compare results
across studies.
The guidelines arose from a working group
convened by the Association for Research in
Vision and Ophthalmology (ARVO) and the
International Agency for the Prevention of
Blindness (IAPB).
They were published this month in the ARVO
journal Investigative
Ophthalmology and Visual Science (The
Cost of Visual Impairment: Purpose,
Perspectives, and Guidance).
The group, representing participants from
around the world and from major vision
research organizations, came together to
review the methods used in two US studies
and one Australian study and to develop a
consensus on appropriate methods to employ
in future studies on the cost of vision
impairment regardless of where they are
conducted.
“When estimates of the cost of visual
impairment vary over time or across
countries,” explains Johns Hopkins
University researcher Kevin Frick, PhD, the
lead author, “policy makers are left to
ponder whether one estimate differs from
another because of changes in the
population, changes in the impact of the
disease or changes in the methods.
Researchers can help policy makers by
removing one of the potential variables —
changes in methods.”
In September 2007 ARVO and IAPB organized
the Vancouver Economic Burden of Vision Loss
Group to examine the various methods used to
measure visual impairment impact and
recommend best practices.
The panel of 12 leading vision researchers
and health care professionals proposed seven
guidelines, summarized as follows:
1. A comprehensive list of costs includes
monetary expenditures on health care
(hospital, outpatient, and other), monetary
expenditures on things other than health
care, loss of patient productivity, loss of
family member productivity, deadweight
losses and loss of patient wellbeing.
2. In any assessment of either prevalent or
incident costs, the authors should identify
the specific items included under the major
categories in recommendation 1.
3. Costs should be presented as separate
line items to facilitate comparisons among
studies.
4. A default position is to use a single
discount rate for all calculations in an
analysis.
5. The assumed value of purchasing a DALY or
QALY should be clearly stated and justified.
6. It is essential to indicate the
perspective of costs included.
7. The decision-making context and starting
point of the analysis should be clear. A
statement of whether and how the analysis
will be used as part of other analyses is
essential.
According to co-author Steven Kymes, PhD, of
Washington University in St. Louis, “Higher
quality studies using a methodology that
consistently follows guidelines will help
decision makers and advocates in the
ophthalmology community to better understand
the magnitude of the impact of visual
impairment, how it is likely to change with
demographic changes and no additional
interventions, and how additional
interventions can change the impact over
time.”
Dr. Frick says the next task is ensuring
that the guidelines are disseminated within
the research community. Hosting a workshop
at an industry conference and sharing the
recommendations in additional ophthalmology
journals would enhance awareness of the
guidelines and support efforts to adopt
their practice.
“Following consensus-based guidelines will
also make it easier for those asking
questions about the impact of visual
impairment to know that they are receiving
high quality estimates,” says Dr. Frick.
“And those who are involved in the process
of making sure only high quality proposals
are funded and only high quality manuscripts
get published will have an easier task.”
The Association for Research in Vision and
Ophthalmology (ARVO) is the largest eye and
vision research organization in the world.
Members include more than 12,500 eye and
vision researchers from over 80 countries.
ARVO encourages and assists research,
training, publication and knowledge-sharing
in vision and ophthalmology.
The ARVO peer-reviewed journal Investigative
Ophthalmology & Visual Science (IOVS)
publishes results from original
hypothesis-based clinical and laboratory
research studies. IOVS ranks No. 4 in Impact
Factor among ophthalmology journals. It is
published online monthly.
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