Epidemiology of outpatient and inpatient eye injury in Taiwan: 2000, 2005, 2010, and 2015

Purpose To estimate the incidence rate of eye injuries (EI) requiring inpatient and outpatient treatment in Taiwan and compare the epidemiologic characteristics of EI (age, sex, treatment setting, seasonality, occupation, external cause, diagnosis, and surgery) in the years 2000, 2005, 2010, and 2015. Methods We analyzed four random samples of 1,000,000 beneficiaries each from 2000, 2005, 2010, and 2015 of the Taiwan National Health Insurance Program. The direct age-standardized rate, with 95% confidence interval (CI), was used to compare EI rates for the four calendar years. The chi-square test and chi-square test for trend were used to compare data for the four calendar years. Results Annual EI incidence rates were between 2.57% in 2000 and 3.28% in 2015. The age-standardized rates were 2.73% (95% CI, 2.70%–2.76%) in 2000, 3.37% (95% CI, 3.33%–3.41%) in 2005, 3.31% (95% CI, 3.28%–3.35%) in 2010, and 3.02% (95% CI, 2.99%–3.06%) in 2015. Manual workers had the highest EI incidence rate, followed by non-manual workers and civil servants. The proportion of EI requiring inpatient treatment declined from 1.34% in 2000 to 0.63% in 2015 (P <0.0001). Analysis of seasonality showed a consistent decrease in February in the four sampling years; however, this decrease in EI was only seen in outpatients, not in EI requiring hospitalization. The proportion of outpatients requiring surgery significantly decreased, from 2.53% in 2000 to 1.2% in 2015 (P<0.0001). However, the proportion of inpatients requiring surgery for EI as the principal diagnosis increased from 69.32% in 2000 to 83.02% in 2015 (P = 0.29), and the proportion of inpatients requiring surgery for EI as a secondary diagnosis increased from 54.86% in 2000 to 71.6% in 2015 (P = 0.0019). Among inpatients with EI, the most common cause of EI was a traffic accident (44.79%, especially motorcycles), followed by falls (9.75%) and homicide (6.05%). Conclusion In Taiwan, the annual EI incidence rate slightly increased from 2000 to 2005 and then decreased through 2015. The proportion of EI patients requiring hospitalization decreased from 1.34% in 2000 to 0.63% in 2015, but the percentage of inpatients requiring surgery increased. Traffic accidents (especially those involving motorcyclists) remained the predominant external cause of EI requiring hospitalization during the study period.

[1]  J. McKelvie,et al.  New Zealand adult ocular trauma study: A 10‐year national review of 332 418 cases of ocular injury in adults aged 18 to 99 years , 2020, Clinical & experimental ophthalmology.

[2]  J. McKelvie,et al.  New Zealand childhood ocular trauma study: Analysis of 75 601 cases of ocular injury from 2007 to 2016 , 2019, Clinical & experimental ophthalmology.

[3]  R. Agrawal,et al.  Eye injury registries - A systematic review. , 2019, Injury.

[4]  Shu‐Man Lin,et al.  Does the ‘Chinese New Year effect’ exist? Hospital mortality in patients admitted to internal medicine departments during official consecutive holidays: a nationwide population-based cohort study , 2019, BMJ Open.

[5]  J. Canner,et al.  Changes in the Incidence of Eye Trauma Hospitalizations in the United States From 2001 Through 2014 , 2019, JAMA ophthalmology.

[6]  K. Wheeler,et al.  Trends in US Emergency Department Visits for Pediatric Acute Ocular Injury , 2018, JAMA ophthalmology.

[7]  T. Porco,et al.  Ocular Injury in United States Emergency Departments: Seasonality and Annual Trends Estimated from a Nationally Representative Dataset. , 2018, American journal of ophthalmology.

[8]  T. Wong,et al.  Prevalence, subtypes, severity and determinants of ocular trauma: The Singapore Chinese Eye Study , 2017, British Journal of Ophthalmology.

[9]  How-Ran Guo,et al.  Epidemiology and patterns of facial fractures due to road traffic accidents in Taiwan: A 15-year retrospective study , 2017, Traffic injury prevention.

[10]  Baihua Chen,et al.  Epidemiology and clinical characteristics of patients hospitalized for ocular trauma in South‐Central China , 2017, Acta ophthalmologica.

[11]  D. Mackey,et al.  Eye Injury Prevention for the Pediatric Population , 2016, Asia-Pacific journal of ophthalmology.

[12]  T. Toh,et al.  Determinant Factors of Poor Visual Outcome After Ocular Trauma: A Retrospective Study in Central Sarawak, Malaysia , 2016, Asia-Pacific journal of ophthalmology.

[13]  Mingming Cai,et al.  Epidemiological Characteristics of Work-Related Ocular Trauma in Southwest Region of China , 2015, International journal of environmental research and public health.

[14]  L. See,et al.  The Role of Principal and Secondary Diagnoses of Hospitalized Eye Trauma: A Nationwide Cohort in Taiwan, 1996-2010 , 2015, PloS one.

[15]  P. Shah,et al.  The epidemiology and etiology of pediatric ocular trauma. , 2013, Survey of ophthalmology.

[16]  Liping Li,et al.  Epidemiology of Patients Hospitalized for Ocular Trauma in the Chaoshan Region of China, 2001–2010 , 2012, PloS one.

[17]  Simon C. Potter,et al.  A Genome-Wide Association Search for Type 2 Diabetes Genes in African Americans , 2012, PLoS ONE.

[18]  R. Mehrdad,et al.  Work-Related Eye Injury: The Main Cause of Ocular Trauma in Iran , 2010, European journal of ophthalmology.

[19]  G. McLatchie,et al.  Eye Injuries in Sport , 2010, Scottish medical journal.

[20]  S. Sizmaz,et al.  Eye injury (ocular trauma) in southern Turkey: epidemiology, ocular survival, and visual outcome , 2010, International Ophthalmology.

[21]  Salvatore Cillino,et al.  A five-year retrospective study of the epidemiological characteristics and visual outcomes of patients hospitalized for ocular trauma in a Mediterranean area. , 2008, BMC ophthalmology.

[22]  Samy Suissa,et al.  Immortal time bias in pharmaco-epidemiology. , 2008, American journal of epidemiology.

[23]  Chi-kung Ho,et al.  Hospitalized eye injury in a large industrial city of South-Eastern Asia , 2008, Graefe's Archive for Clinical and Experimental Ophthalmology.

[24]  K. Forrest,et al.  Use of Protective Eyewear in U.S. Adults: Results from the 2002 National Health Interview Survey , 2008, Ophthalmic epidemiology.

[25]  C. Owsley,et al.  Trends in eye injury in the United States, 1992-2001. , 2006, Investigative ophthalmology & visual science.

[26]  J. Katz,et al.  The epidemiology of ocular trauma in rural Nepal , 2004, British Journal of Ophthalmology.

[27]  R. Klein,et al.  The prevalence and 5-year incidence of ocular trauma. The Beaver Dam Eye Study. , 2000, Ophthalmology.

[28]  T. Wong,et al.  A population-based study on the incidence of severe ocular trauma in Singapore. , 1999, American journal of ophthalmology.

[29]  H R Taylor,et al.  Epidemiology of ocular trauma in Australia. , 1999, Ophthalmology.

[30]  B. Thylefors,et al.  The global impact of eye injuries. , 1998, Ophthalmic epidemiology.

[31]  D. Minassian,et al.  Incidence of cases of ocular trauma admitted to hospital and incidence of blinding outcome. , 1996, The British journal of ophthalmology.

[32]  J. Katz,et al.  Lifetime prevalence of ocular injuries from the Baltimore Eye Survey. , 1993, Archives of ophthalmology.

[33]  J. Tielsch,et al.  Ocular trauma in the United States. Eye injuries resulting in hospitalization, 1984 through 1987. , 1992, Archives of ophthalmology.

[34]  J. Tielsch,et al.  Time trends in the incidence of hospitalized ocular trauma. , 1989, Archives of ophthalmology.

[35]  R. Glynn,et al.  The incidence of eye injuries in New England adults. , 1988, Archives of ophthalmology.

[36]  N. Hall,et al.  The eye and the seatbelt in Wessex. , 1985, The British journal of ophthalmology.

[37]  J. Wilson The International Agency for the Prevention of Blindness , 1984, Documenta Ophthalmologica.

[38]  P. Vinger Sports eye injuries a preventable disease. , 1981, Ophthalmology.

[39]  B. Jones International agency for the prevention of blindness. , 1979, American journal of ophthalmology.

[40]  J. Leonard National Trends in Ocular Injury: Differing Studies, Common Call to Action. , 2019, JAMA ophthalmology.

[41]  J. Canner,et al.  Ocular injury in the United States: Emergency department visits from 2006-2011. , 2016, Injury.

[42]  S. Beatty,et al.  Ocular injury requiring hospitalisation in the south east of Ireland: 2001-2007. , 2010, Injury.

[43]  Victor J. D'amato,et al.  Eye-and-Face Personal Protective Equipment Gateway Safet , 2009 .

[44]  T. Wong,et al.  The epidemiology of ocular trauma in Singapore: Perspective from the emergency service of a large tertiary hospital , 2001, Eye.

[45]  Rafael Lozano,et al.  AGE STANDARDIZATION OF RATES: A NEW WHO STANDARD , 2000 .

[46]  R. M. Wilson,et al.  A population-based survey of hospitalized work-related ocular injury: diagnoses, cause of injury, resource utilization, and hospitalization outcome. , 1999, Ophthalmic epidemiology.

[47]  M. Graffar [Modern epidemiology]. , 1971, Bruxelles medical.