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Comparing Telephone Survey Responses to Best-Corrected Visual Acuity to Estimate the Accuracy of Identifying Vision Loss: Validation Study.

John WittenbornAaron Y LeeElizabeth A LundeenPhoebe A LamudaJinan SaaddineGrace L SuRandy LuAashka DamaniJonathan S ZawadzkiColin P FroinesJolie Z ShenTimothy-Paul H KungRyan T YanagiharaMorgan MaringMelissa M TakahashiMarian BlazesDavid B Rein
Published in: JMIR public health and surveillance (2023)
Although survey questions are not considered to be sufficiently accurate to be used as a diagnostic test at the individual level, we did find relatively high levels of accuracy for some questions. At the population level, we found that the relative prevalence of the 2 most accurate survey questions were highly correlated with the prevalence of measured visual acuity loss among nearly all demographic groups. The results of this study suggest that self-reported vision questions fielded in national surveys are likely to yield an accurate and stable signal of vision loss across different population groups, although the actual measure of prevalence from these questions is not directly analogous to that of BCVA.
Keyphrases
  • cross sectional
  • risk factors
  • high resolution
  • mass spectrometry