The impact of congenital strabismus surgery on quality of life in children

Purpose: To assess quality of life (QOL) in children undergoing strabismus surgery. Methods: This prospective cohort study included 87 children (including 41 boys, 47.1%) with mean age of 8.7 ± 4.1 years at three academic eye hospitals in Tehran. A modified version of the RAND Health Insurance Study...

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Main Authors: Hossein Ziaei, Marzieh Katibeh, Shadin Mohammadi, Mahbobeh Mirzaei, Hamid-Reza Moein, Bahareh Kheiri, Shoreh Taghaddos, Zhale Rajavi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Knowledge E 2016-01-01
Series:Journal of Ophthalmic & Vision Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.jovr.org/article.asp?issn=2008-322X;year=2016;volume=11;issue=2;spage=188;epage=192;aulast=Ziaei
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spelling doaj-55dd2379942a43da94053b3b46f082de2020-11-25T02:06:54ZengKnowledge EJournal of Ophthalmic & Vision Research2008-322X2016-01-0111218819210.4103/2008-322X.183918The impact of congenital strabismus surgery on quality of life in childrenHossein ZiaeiMarzieh KatibehShadin MohammadiMahbobeh MirzaeiHamid-Reza MoeinBahareh KheiriShoreh TaghaddosZhale RajaviPurpose: To assess quality of life (QOL) in children undergoing strabismus surgery. Methods: This prospective cohort study included 87 children (including 41 boys, 47.1%) with mean age of 8.7 ± 4.1 years at three academic eye hospitals in Tehran. A modified version of the RAND Health Insurance Study QOL questionnaire was filled based on interviews with parents before and three months after surgery. The questionnaire consisted of 36 Likert scale items ranging in score from 0 to 100, with higher scores representing better function. Relevant items were averaged together and categorized into 11 distinct QOL dimensions. Results: The majority of QOL dimensions improved after strabismus surgery including functional limitation (92.36 ± 16.78 vs. 82.15 ± 20.92, P< 0.01), anxiety (68.61 ± 18.15 vs. 60.28 ± 19.19, P< 0.01), depression (82.31 ± 16.42 vs. 72.36 ± 17.72, P< 0.01), positive well-being (73.33 ± 14.69 vs. 70.56 ± 15.96, 0.048), social relations (79.43 ± 11.52 vs. 68.69 ± 30.98, 0.002), general health perception (76.4 ± 16.48 vs. 67.36 ± 18.9, P< 0.01), resistance/susceptibility (79.72 ± 13.4 vs. 71.02 ± 14.58, P< 0.01), satisfaction with development (73.81 ± 16.07 vs. 70.07 ± 14.98, P = 0.006), and eye alignment concerns (75.44 ± 15.89 vs. 53.14 ± 26.61, P< 0.01). Only self-reported prior health (71.73 ± 15.9 vs. 72.78 ± 15.29, P = 0.33) and parent-child closeness (72.92 ± 15.82 vs. 72.5 ± 17.99, P = 0.73) did not significantly improve. The amount of ocular realignment (more vs. less than 20 prism diopters [PD]) had a direct correlation with improvement in subscales of satisfaction with development (0.019) and eye alignment concerns (0.028). Conclusion: Strabismus surgery positively impacts physical and psychosocial function in children. Children with a greater amount of correction experienced more QOL improvement after surgery.http://www.jovr.org/article.asp?issn=2008-322X;year=2016;volume=11;issue=2;spage=188;epage=192;aulast=ZiaeiQuality of Life; Strabismus; Surgery
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hossein Ziaei
Marzieh Katibeh
Shadin Mohammadi
Mahbobeh Mirzaei
Hamid-Reza Moein
Bahareh Kheiri
Shoreh Taghaddos
Zhale Rajavi
spellingShingle Hossein Ziaei
Marzieh Katibeh
Shadin Mohammadi
Mahbobeh Mirzaei
Hamid-Reza Moein
Bahareh Kheiri
Shoreh Taghaddos
Zhale Rajavi
The impact of congenital strabismus surgery on quality of life in children
Journal of Ophthalmic & Vision Research
Quality of Life; Strabismus; Surgery
author_facet Hossein Ziaei
Marzieh Katibeh
Shadin Mohammadi
Mahbobeh Mirzaei
Hamid-Reza Moein
Bahareh Kheiri
Shoreh Taghaddos
Zhale Rajavi
author_sort Hossein Ziaei
title The impact of congenital strabismus surgery on quality of life in children
title_short The impact of congenital strabismus surgery on quality of life in children
title_full The impact of congenital strabismus surgery on quality of life in children
title_fullStr The impact of congenital strabismus surgery on quality of life in children
title_full_unstemmed The impact of congenital strabismus surgery on quality of life in children
title_sort impact of congenital strabismus surgery on quality of life in children
publisher Knowledge E
series Journal of Ophthalmic & Vision Research
issn 2008-322X
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Purpose: To assess quality of life (QOL) in children undergoing strabismus surgery. Methods: This prospective cohort study included 87 children (including 41 boys, 47.1%) with mean age of 8.7 ± 4.1 years at three academic eye hospitals in Tehran. A modified version of the RAND Health Insurance Study QOL questionnaire was filled based on interviews with parents before and three months after surgery. The questionnaire consisted of 36 Likert scale items ranging in score from 0 to 100, with higher scores representing better function. Relevant items were averaged together and categorized into 11 distinct QOL dimensions. Results: The majority of QOL dimensions improved after strabismus surgery including functional limitation (92.36 ± 16.78 vs. 82.15 ± 20.92, P< 0.01), anxiety (68.61 ± 18.15 vs. 60.28 ± 19.19, P< 0.01), depression (82.31 ± 16.42 vs. 72.36 ± 17.72, P< 0.01), positive well-being (73.33 ± 14.69 vs. 70.56 ± 15.96, 0.048), social relations (79.43 ± 11.52 vs. 68.69 ± 30.98, 0.002), general health perception (76.4 ± 16.48 vs. 67.36 ± 18.9, P< 0.01), resistance/susceptibility (79.72 ± 13.4 vs. 71.02 ± 14.58, P< 0.01), satisfaction with development (73.81 ± 16.07 vs. 70.07 ± 14.98, P = 0.006), and eye alignment concerns (75.44 ± 15.89 vs. 53.14 ± 26.61, P< 0.01). Only self-reported prior health (71.73 ± 15.9 vs. 72.78 ± 15.29, P = 0.33) and parent-child closeness (72.92 ± 15.82 vs. 72.5 ± 17.99, P = 0.73) did not significantly improve. The amount of ocular realignment (more vs. less than 20 prism diopters [PD]) had a direct correlation with improvement in subscales of satisfaction with development (0.019) and eye alignment concerns (0.028). Conclusion: Strabismus surgery positively impacts physical and psychosocial function in children. Children with a greater amount of correction experienced more QOL improvement after surgery.
topic Quality of Life; Strabismus; Surgery
url http://www.jovr.org/article.asp?issn=2008-322X;year=2016;volume=11;issue=2;spage=188;epage=192;aulast=Ziaei
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