Nordic Registers of Visually Impaired Children

A Nordic study group, NORDSYN, consisting of ophthalmologists from Denmark (Thomas Rosenberg), Finland (Sirkka-Liisa Rudanko), Iceland (Gudmundur Viggosson), Norway (Tor Flage, Egill Hansen, Ruth Riise) and Sweden (Kristina Tornqvist), has compiled data from registers in Denmark, Finland, Iceland an...

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Published in:Scandinavian Journal of Social Medicine
Main Author: Riise, Ruth
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publications 1993
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/140349489302100202
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/140349489302100202
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spelling crsagepubl:10.1177/140349489302100202 2024-10-29T17:45:00+00:00 Nordic Registers of Visually Impaired Children Riise, Ruth 1993 http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/140349489302100202 https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/140349489302100202 en eng SAGE Publications https://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license Scandinavian Journal of Social Medicine volume 21, issue 2, page 66-68 ISSN 0300-8037 journal-article 1993 crsagepubl https://doi.org/10.1177/140349489302100202 2024-10-01T04:11:46Z A Nordic study group, NORDSYN, consisting of ophthalmologists from Denmark (Thomas Rosenberg), Finland (Sirkka-Liisa Rudanko), Iceland (Gudmundur Viggosson), Norway (Tor Flage, Egill Hansen, Ruth Riise) and Sweden (Kristina Tornqvist), has compiled data from registers in Denmark, Finland, Iceland and Norway of 2527 visually impaired children. The Swedish register was established later in 1990. Each record contains the following information: sex, year of birth, year of registration, classification of visual impairment, ocular diagnosis, systemic diagnosis, aetiology and evt. additional impairments. The ocular diagnoses were compiled into groups among which congenital malformations and neuro-ophthalmological diseases were the most dominating. A coding system for aetiology was developed. It was demonstrated, that prenatal factors, including genetic aetiologies, were involved in a large proportion (66%) of the cases. The sex distribution revealed a dominance of males compared to the general population at the same age. The age-specific national prevalences for registration of childhood blindness (WHO-definition: best corrected visual acuity in the best eye less than 3/60 or visual field less than 10 degrees around fixation for the ages 0–15 years) were (N/100 000): Denmark 41, Finland 15, Iceland 19 and Norway 15. The differences were primarily presumed to be due to varying efficiency in registration. A coding system for additional impairments was developed. The proportion of visually impaired children with an additional mobility, hearing or mental impairment was between one third and one half of the national materials thus indicating the need for interdisciplinary tracing of and care for the visually impaired child. Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland SAGE Publications Norway Sirkka ENVELOPE(24.801,24.801,67.808,67.808) Scandinavian Journal of Social Medicine 21 2 66 68
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description A Nordic study group, NORDSYN, consisting of ophthalmologists from Denmark (Thomas Rosenberg), Finland (Sirkka-Liisa Rudanko), Iceland (Gudmundur Viggosson), Norway (Tor Flage, Egill Hansen, Ruth Riise) and Sweden (Kristina Tornqvist), has compiled data from registers in Denmark, Finland, Iceland and Norway of 2527 visually impaired children. The Swedish register was established later in 1990. Each record contains the following information: sex, year of birth, year of registration, classification of visual impairment, ocular diagnosis, systemic diagnosis, aetiology and evt. additional impairments. The ocular diagnoses were compiled into groups among which congenital malformations and neuro-ophthalmological diseases were the most dominating. A coding system for aetiology was developed. It was demonstrated, that prenatal factors, including genetic aetiologies, were involved in a large proportion (66%) of the cases. The sex distribution revealed a dominance of males compared to the general population at the same age. The age-specific national prevalences for registration of childhood blindness (WHO-definition: best corrected visual acuity in the best eye less than 3/60 or visual field less than 10 degrees around fixation for the ages 0–15 years) were (N/100 000): Denmark 41, Finland 15, Iceland 19 and Norway 15. The differences were primarily presumed to be due to varying efficiency in registration. A coding system for additional impairments was developed. The proportion of visually impaired children with an additional mobility, hearing or mental impairment was between one third and one half of the national materials thus indicating the need for interdisciplinary tracing of and care for the visually impaired child.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Riise, Ruth
spellingShingle Riise, Ruth
Nordic Registers of Visually Impaired Children
author_facet Riise, Ruth
author_sort Riise, Ruth
title Nordic Registers of Visually Impaired Children
title_short Nordic Registers of Visually Impaired Children
title_full Nordic Registers of Visually Impaired Children
title_fullStr Nordic Registers of Visually Impaired Children
title_full_unstemmed Nordic Registers of Visually Impaired Children
title_sort nordic registers of visually impaired children
publisher SAGE Publications
publishDate 1993
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/140349489302100202
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/140349489302100202
long_lat ENVELOPE(24.801,24.801,67.808,67.808)
geographic Norway
Sirkka
geographic_facet Norway
Sirkka
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_source Scandinavian Journal of Social Medicine
volume 21, issue 2, page 66-68
ISSN 0300-8037
op_rights https://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1177/140349489302100202
container_title Scandinavian Journal of Social Medicine
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op_container_end_page 68
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