Abstract
Purpose
The authors’ aim was to verify if the targets of the Saint Vincent Declaration concerning the reduction of diabetes-related blindness in the Warmia and Mazury Region, Poland, had been achieved.
Methods
A register of World Health Organization-defined blindness due to diabetes was conducted in the Warmia and Mazury Region between 1989 and 2004. The incidence rate of blindness as the number of new cases/100,000 diabetic population/year and 100,000 total population/year was estimated for three subperiods differing in political-economic system and diabetologic care delivery: 1989–1994, 1995–1999, and 2000–2004.
Results
The major cause of blindness among diabetic patients was diabetic eye disease (97%). Out of 70 patients with Type 1 diabetes, 53% lost vision due to proliferative diabetologic vitreoretinopathy 20% due to neovascularization with glaucoma, while clinically significant macula edema and cataract associated with proliferative diabetologic vitreoretinopathy or clinically significant macula edema predominated in 210 patients with Type 2 diabetes. The incidence rate of blindness due to diabetes in the diabetic population ranged from 102.4/100,000 (confidence interval [CI]: 65.7–139.0) to 13.3/100,000 (3.8–24.9). The incidence rate of blindness due to Type 1 diabetes ranged from 1.3/100,000 (CI: 0.5–2.2) to 0.1/100,000 (CI: −0.1–0.4). The incidence rate of blindness due to Type 2 diabetes was variable in the first subperiod, and it next decreased by 19% each year from 3.9/100,000 (CI: 2.5–5.3) to 0.7/100,000 (CI: 0.1–1.2); p<0.001.
Conclusions
The Saint Vincent Declaration target of reducing diabetes-related blindness by one third appears to have been achieved in the Warmia and Mazury Region.
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