Abstract
Aims
To evaluate the current visual status and ophthalmic history of a sample of elderly patients with fractured neck of femur and to study the relationship between visual status and demographic factors.
Methods
A four-centre study of all patients admitted to hospital with fractured neck of femur. The setting was two district (Ayr, Dunfermline) and two teaching (Glasgow, Dundee) hospitals in Scotland. The study examined 537 patients aged 65 years and over admitted with acute fractured neck of femur to hospital.
Results
Bilateral visual impairment (binocular visual acuity worse than 6/12) was found in 239 of 518 patients (46%). Of this group, the principal causes for visual deficit were untreated cataract (49%), macular degeneration (21%), uncorrected refractive error (17%), and glaucoma (3%).
The visually impaired group were more likely to have symptomatic visual complaints (58 vs 26%), however, were less likely to be under optometric care (71 vs 85%). A higher proportion of the group with visual impairment lived in areas of social deprivation (40 vs 26%).
Conclusions
Patients with fractured neck of femur represent a frail elderly group that have poorer vision than that documented in any other elderly population. The visual defect was potentially remediable in the majority of cases but this group of individuals are not generally in touch with the ophthalmic services. Social deprivation appears to be associated with this groups' inability to access ophthalmic care.
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Acknowledgements
This work was supported by grant from Centre of Health and Social Research, Glenrothes.
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Part funded by grant from Centre for Health and Social Research, Fife.
Presented at British Geriatric society, London, October 2002.
Poster at Royal College of Ophthalmology Congress 2003.
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Cox, A., Blaikie, A., MacEwen, C. et al. Visual impairment in elderly patients with hip fracture: causes and associations. Eye 19, 652–656 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.eye.6701610
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.eye.6701610
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