# Prevalence of Refractive Errors Among Children at a Tertiary Care Center in Karnataka: A Cross-Sectional Study

**Authors:** Karishma Munoli, Siddesh Harpanalli, Ramanna Chalvadi, Aishwarya Polisgowdar, Bylappanavara Girish, Garlapati V Vishnu

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.62172 · 2024-06-11

## TL;DR

This study found that 35% of children in Karnataka had refractive errors, with myopia being the most common, highlighting the need for early detection and correction.

## Contribution

The study provides new prevalence data on refractive errors among children in a specific region of South India.

## Key findings

- Refractive errors were present in 35% of the 420 children examined.
- Myopia was the most common refractive error, affecting 16% of the children.
- There was no significant gender difference in the prevalence of refractive errors.

## Abstract

Background: Refractive errors (REs) are the major cause of blindness and impaired vision with considerable morbidity. Finding the prevalence with early detection of REs with appropriate corrective measures can bring down eye morbidity in children.

Aim: The aim of the study was to find the prevalence of REs among children attending Raichur Institute of Medical Sciences Teaching Hospital in Karnataka State of South India.

Methodology: This hospital-based cross-sectional study was conducted with a total of 420 study subjects. Examination of the eyes for REs was carried out using a refractometer. The REs were noted in myopia < -0.5 dioptres (D), hypermetropia > + 0.5 D, and astigmatism > 0.5 cylinder D. The data were statistically subjected to a statistics test. Categorical measurement was presented as frequency (percentage). The association between the parameters was done using the chi-square test. A p-value < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.

Results: Out of 420 examined, REs were present among 147 (35%) study subjects, and myopia 67 (16%) was the highest prevalent in comparison to hypermetropia 42 (10%) and astigmatism 38 (9%). The male subjects had 77 (34.4%) REs, and the female subjects had 70 (35.7%) REs. In both genders, myopia was the highest prevalent, followed by hypermetropia and astigmatism.

Conclusion: The prevalence of REs among children is alarming, and it should be corrected at an early age to prevent further complications in adulthood. Ophthalmologists should generate regional data about the prevalence of REs, create awareness about the prevention of REs among the risk population, and utilize government-sponsored blind eradication programs for comprehensive eye care in the larger interest of the affected population and risk population.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** hypermetropia (MESH:D006956), myopia (MESH:D009216), REs (MESH:D012030), astigmatism (MESH:D001251), blind (MESH:D001766), impaired vision (MESH:D014786)

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11238894