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. 2016 Jun 7;101(3):244–250. doi: 10.1136/bjophthalmol-2016-308582

Table 1.

Clinical and sociodemographic characteristics of children

Child characteristics N (%) total 99
Age group*
 10–12 years 61 (62%)
 13–15 years 38 (38%)
Gender
 Boys 57 (58%)
 Girls 42 (42%)
Ethnicity
 Majority ethnicity (white ethnic groups) 81 (81.8%)
 Minority ethnicity (Asian, black, mixed, other non-white) 18 (18.2%)
Index of multiple deprivation†
 1: most deprived 20 (21.1%)
 2 11 (11.6%)
 3 19 (20%)
 4 20 (21.1%)
 5: least deprived 25 (26.3%)
Vision level
VI group A
 VI 1: LogMAR 0.50–0.70 43 (43.4%)
 VI 2: LogMAR 0.72–1.00 35 (35.4%)
VI group B
 SVI: LogMAR 1.02–1.30 10 (10.1%)
 Blind: LogMAR 1.32 or worse 11 (11.1%)
Course of visual loss
 Stable§ 55 (55.6%)
 Progressive 44 (44.4%)
Timing of VI onset
 Early (≤2 years) 71 (71.7%)
 Late 28 (28.3%)
Diagnosis by site of VI¶
 Whole globe and anterior segment 2 (2%)
 Glaucoma—primary or secondary 8 (8.2%)
 Cornea (sclerocornea and corneal opacities) 4 (4.1%)
 Lens (cataract and aphakia) 10 (10.2%)
 Uvea 6 (6.1%)
 Retina 64 (65.3%)
 Optic nerve 10 (10.2%)
 Cerebral/visual pathways 5 (5.1%)
 Other (idiopathic nystagmus, high refractive error) 11 (11.2%)

*Mean age=12.2, SD=1.9. †Based on UK postal code supplied by clinical team (missing in four children).

‡WHO categories of visual impairment based on acuity in better seeing eye. §Acceleration of visual loss was determined by the review of the notes and visual impairment characteristics by the leading author's (consultant ophthalmologist). ¶Does not add up to 100% because some children had visual impairment originating in multiple sites (missing in 1 child as diagnosis could not be obtained from the hospital where the patient was identified).

LogMAR, the logarithm of minimum angle of resolution; SVI, severe visual impairment; VI, visual impairment.