Amblyopia is the leading cause of preventable monocular vision loss in children, with effectiveness of treatment critically dependent on early detection during the plastic period of visual development. Traditional vision screening methods in primary care pediatrics, reliant on subjective visual acuity tests, have significant limitations in sensitivity and testability, particularly in pre-verbal children. This paper evaluates the feasibility, accuracy, and impact of integrating handheld autorefractors into the pediatric primary care vision screening protocol to enhance the early detection of amblyogenic risk factors (ARFs). Handheld autorefractors demonstrated superior testability rates (>95%), especially in children under 3 years of age, and significantly higher sensitivity for detecting the most common ARFs, particularly significant refractive errors like hyperopia and astigmatism. They were found to be practical for use in a busy primary care setting, requiring minimal training and time. Timely screening before age 5, enabled by this technology, is directly linked to dramatically improved treatment outcomes and a reduction in the prevalence of severe amblyopia. The integration of handheld autorefractors into pediatric primary care vision screening is a feasible, accurate, and highly effective strategy. It represents a major advancement in public health efforts to prevent amblyopia by enabling objective, early detection of amblyogenic risk factors within the critical window for successful intervention.
Althunayan et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
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