Patterns and determinants of incident cataract surgery in China from 2011 to 2015 using a nationally representative longitudinal database

Catherine Jan, Jin Xin, Yanhui Dong, Thomas Butt, Robert Chang, Lisa Keay, Mingguang He, David Friedman, Nathan Congdon

Research output: Journal article publicationJournal articleAcademic researchpeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

Objectives To investigate incident cataract surgery and to investigate determinants of cataract surgery uptake in Chinese adults. Design This nationally representative longitudinal study recorded self-reported incident cataract surgery, and measured biological, clinical and socioeconomical characteristics at baseline and endline. Setting In the first stage, 150 county-level units were randomly chosen with a probability-proportional-to-size sampling technique from a sampling frame containing all county-level units. The sample was stratified by region and within region by urban district or rural county and per capita gross domestic product. The final sample of 150 counties fell within 28 provinces of China. Participants Urban and rural Chinese persons aged 45 years and older. Primary and secondary outcome measures Incident cataract surgery (primary outcome) and the factors associated with incident cataract surgery (secondary outcome). Results Among 16 663 people enrolled in 2011, 13 705 (82.2%) attended follow-up in 2015. Among these, 167 (1.22%) reported incident cataract surgery. Those receiving surgery were significantly older (66.2±8.79 vs 58.3±9.18, p≤0.001) and more likely to report: illiteracy (44.9% vs 27.1%, p<0.001), poor baseline distance vision (49.7% vs 20.0%, p≤0.001), poor baseline near vision (37.1% vs 21.8%, p≤0.001), baseline visual impairment (15.6% vs 5.5%, p≤0.001), diabetes (12.0% vs 7.42%, p≤0.05) and higher baseline depression scores (9.7 vs 8.4 on a scale of 0-30, p≤0.05). In linear regression models, older age, worse distance vision, hypertension or diabetes, illiteracy and lower depression score were significantly associated with undergoing surgery. Results were similar in models including only persons aged ≥60 years, except that urban residence was also associated with surgery. When only those aged ≥60 years with poor vision were included, results were again the same, except that higher household expenditure was also associated with surgery. Conclusions In China, cataract surgical rates remain low; underserved groups such as rural dwellers are less likely to receive cataract surgery.
Original languageEnglish
Article numbere069702
Pages (from-to)1-8
Number of pages8
JournalBMJ Open
Volume13
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 21 Jun 2023
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • cataract and refractive surgery
  • epidemiology
  • ophthalmology

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Medicine

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