Abstract

Volume.120 Number.4

Original article : Clinical science

Epidemiological Study of Poor Visual Acuity among Schoolchildren in Bonin Islands
Misae Ito1, Kimiya Shimizu2, Takushi Kawamorita1, Nobuyuki Shoji1,2
1 Department of Rehabilitation, Orthoptics and Visual Science Course, School of Allied Health Science, Kitasato University
2 Department of Ophthalmology, School of Medicine, Kitasato University

Purpose: To investigate the change in uncorrected visual acuity (UCVA) among schoolchildren in Bonin Islands.
Subjects and methods: UCVA of schoolchildren aged 6 to 14 years, was collected from reports of School Health Examination Surveys conducted from 1981 to 2012. The proportion of schoolchildren with poor UCVA in the Bonin Islands was compared with those in metropolitan Tokyo. The results in Bonin Islands were also divided into two groups, before- and after-1996 when terrestrial television broadcasting service has been started, and the data of those two groups were compared.
Results: The proportion of schoolchildren with poor UCVA in Bonin Islands was lower than that in Tokyo. Among the residents of Bonin Islands, the proportion of schoolchildren with UCVA of <1.0 was higher in the after-1996 group than in the before-1996 group, with a clear increase in schoolchildren with poor UCVA after 1996 (p<0.01, Fisher's exact test), examined among the 4th grade of elementary school or above. After 1996, 26.6% of first graders at a public junior high school had poor UCVA of <0.7, whereas before 1996 no such case could be detected.
Conclusion: The present study revealed that the proportions of schoolchildren with poor UCVA in Bonin Islands was lower than that in Tokyo; but in the residents of Bonin Islands after 1996, the proportion of the schoolchildren with poor UCVA increased.
Nippon Ganka Gakkai Zasshi (J Jpn Ophthalmol Soc) 120: 296-302, 2016.

Key words
Uncorrected visual acuity, Bonin Islands, Schoolchildren
Reprint requests to
Misae Ito, C.O., Ph.D. Department of Rehabilitation, Orthoptics and Visual Science Course, School of Allied Health Science, Kitasato University. 1-15-1 Kitasato, Minami-ku, Sagamihara 252-0373, Japan