Litcius/Paper detail

BCLA CLEAR Presbyopia: Epidemiology and impact

Maria Markoulli, Tim Fricke, Anitha Arvind, Kevin D. Frick, Kerryn M Hart, Mahesh Raj Joshi, Himal Kandel, António Filipe Macedo, Dimitra Makrynioti, Neil Retallic, Nery García‐Porta, Gauri Shankar Shrestha, James S. Wolffsohn

2024Contact Lens and Anterior Eye35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The global all-ages prevalence of epidemiologically-measured 'functional' presbyopia was estimated at 24.9% in 2015, affecting 1.8 billion people. This prevalence was projected to stabilise at 24.1% in 2030 due to increasing myopia, but to affect more people (2.1 billion) due to population dynamics. Factors affecting the prevalence of presbyopia include age, geographic location, urban versus rural location, sex, and, to a lesser extent, socioeconomic status, literacy and education, health literacy and inequality. Risk factors for early onset of presbyopia included environmental factors, nutrition, near demands, refractive error, accommodative dysfunction, medications, certain health conditions and sleep. Presbyopia was found to impact on quality-of-life, in particular quality of vision, labour force participation, work productivity and financial burden, mental health, social wellbeing and physical health. Current understanding makes it clear that presbyopia is a very common age-related condition that has significant impacts on both patient-reported outcome measures and economics. However, there are complexities in defining presbyopia for epidemiological and impact studies. Standardisation of definitions will assist future synthesis, pattern analysis and sense-making between studies.

Topics & Concepts

PresbyopiaSocioeconomic statusLiteracyEpidemiologyOptometryMedicinePublic healthEnvironmental healthQuality of life (healthcare)GerontologyPopulationPsychologyNursingInternal medicinePedagogyOphthalmology and Visual Impairment StudiesErgonomics and Musculoskeletal DisordersOphthalmology and Visual Health Research