Height, Stunting, and Refractive Error Among Rural Chinese Schoolchildren: The See Well to Learn Well Project




Purpose


To evaluate the hypothesis that changes in nutritional status could be partly responsible for observed increases in myopia prevalence among Chinese children.


Design


Cross-sectional cohort study.


Methods


Rural Chinese secondary school children participating in a study of interventions to promote spectacle use were randomly sampled (20% of children with uncorrected vision >6/12 bilaterally, and 100% of remaining children) and underwent cycloplegic refraction with subjective refinement and measurement of height and weight. Stunting was defined according to the World Health Organization standard population.


Results


Among 3226 children in the sample, 2905 (90.0%) took part. Among 1477 children undergoing refraction, 1371 (92.8%) had height and weight measurements. These children had a mean age of 14.5 ± 1.4 years, 59.8% were girls, and mean spherical equivalent refraction was −1.93 ± 1.82 diopters. Stunting was present in 87 children (6.4%). While height was inversely associated with refractive error (RE) (taller children were more myopic) among boys ( r = −0.147, P = .001), this disappeared when adjusting for age, and no such association was observed among girls. Neither girls nor boys with stunting differed significantly in refraction from children without stunting, and neither stunting nor height was associated with RE when adjusting for age, height, and parental education. The power of this study to have detected a 0.75 diopters difference in RE between children with and without stunting was 0.96.


Conclusion


Results from this cross-sectional study are not consistent with the hypothesis that nutritional status is a determinant of RE in this setting.


Evidence from studies in China, Singapore, Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Australia suggests that children of Chinese descent have among the world’s highest prevalence of myopia. Furthermore, this already-high prevalence of myopia among Chinese children and young adults may be rising, though methodological questions remain about some studies of this phenomenon.


In order to explain the apparent rise in myopia prevalence among children of Chinese ethnicity, a number of potential environmental causative factors have been examined. These have included increased near-work activity, higher levels of education, decreased outdoor activity, and increasing population density.


In China, improved nutrition in the two decades since the economic reforms of the early 1980s is believed to have resulted in increases in height among recent cohorts when compared to those born in previous years. It has been theorized that a larger body habitus might be associated with a greater axial length (AL) simply as a function of larger overall body size. This relationship between increased height and longer AL has been reported among Singaporean Chinese schoolchildren and in a Singaporean adult population.


The association of height with refractive error (RE) is likely to be more complex than that with AL, because of the process of vision-driven emmetropization. In fact, studies of height and RE have reported mixed results, including the finding of greater stature among myopic children, of no association, and of shorter heights among myopic individuals. Nonetheless, some authors have proposed that nutritional differences might exist between myopic and nonmyopic individuals.


We sought to examine the basic plausibility of the hypothesis that nutritional changes might underlie observed increases in the myopia prevalence among Chinese children. Height and weight among children during the teenage years, when childhood myopia is most prevalent, may be assumed to reflect a variety of factors, including the stage of puberty and genetic inheritance. In order to focus on those aspects of stature most directly responsive to nutritional intake, we chose to study stunting, which is defined with reference to a standard population assembled by the World Health Organization (WHO) as height ≥2 standard deviations (SD) below the mean for gender and age in months, that is, at the 2.5th percentile or below. Stunting in children and teens is generally held to reflect poor nutritional intake over a prolonged period of time. To the best of our knowledge, stunting has not previously been examined as an index of nutrition in myopic children.


Our hypothesis is that, if improved nutrition could plausibly explain recent increases in myopia prevalence, then children identified on a cross-sectional basis with very low height attributable to poor nutrition (stunting) ought to have significantly less myopia than children with normal or above-normal (overweight or obese) nutritional status.


Methods


The “See Well to Learn Well” project is an on-going randomized trial of interventions to promote spectacle wear among 10 000 secondary school children in 3 towns in the rural Chaoshan region of Southern China. Participants are selected at random from Year 1 and Year 2 classes at all junior and senior high schools in the area.


Subjects


All Year 1 and Year 2 classes (average size approximately 60 children) in all 5 junior high schools and the 1 senior high school of Fuyang Township, Guangdong Province, were enumerated and classes were selected at random from a list of all eligible classes at each school until a total of 600 children (usually 8 to 10 classes) had been identified in the sampling frame. Our pilot testing in the area had demonstrated that participation rates were on the order of 80% to 85%, meaning that 600 children in the sampling frame would be sufficient to guarantee a target figure of 500 children examined at each school.


Fuyang is located in the east of Guangdong province, and has a size of 38.5 square kilometers and a population of 97 000 in 2004. It is located within 90 minutes’ drive of the city of Shantou (population 4.97 million at the end of 2006). The large majority of adults in Fuyang work in farming or agriculture.


Measurement of Visual Acuity and Refraction


Visual acuity (VA) with and without habitual refraction (if available) was measured by trained study personnel in well-lighted areas of the school during daylight hours, at a distance of 5 meters, separately for each eye of each child. Children who did not have their spectacles at school were asked to bring them for vision assessment on a separate day. Identical illuminated Snellen tumbling E vision charts (Shantou City Medical Equipment Ltd, Shantou, China) were employed for all testing. The nontested eye was covered by the subject using a hand-held occluder, with proper occlusion and neutral head position monitored by the examiner. The right eye was tested first. A single optotype of each size was presented first, starting at 6/30. If a letter was failed, testing began 2 lines above, with the child being asked to read all optotypes on the line sequentially. A subject had to identify correctly more than half of the letters on a given line (eg, 3 out of 5, 4 out of 6) in order to be considered to have achieved that level of acuity.


All subjects with vision of ≤6/12 in either eye, and a 20% sample of children with vision >6/12 in both eyes, underwent cycloplegic autorefraction (Potec PRK-5000; Potec Co Ltd, Seoul, Korea) with subjective refinement by an ophthalmologist in each eye, at least 30 minutes after receiving cyclopentolate 1% (Cyclogyl; Alcon Laboratories, Fort Worth, Texas, USA) 1 drop to both eyes every 5 minutes, for a total of 2 drops in each eye. ( Figure 1 ) The results of subjective refraction are utilized throughout.




FIGURE 1


Flow chart depicting the enrollment of rural Chinese schoolchildren into a study of height, stunting, and myopia.


Measurement of Height and Weight


The height in centimeters and weight in kilograms of all subjects were measured (RGZ-120 analog height measurement unit and scale, Jiangsu Suhong Medical Instruments Co Ltd, Changzhou, Jiangsu, People’s Republic of China) and recorded by trained study personnel (physicians), with the children dressed in stocking feet and their usual school clothing. The scale was zeroed at the beginning and end of each morning’s and afternoon’s testing session. Height and weight were used to calculate the body mass index (BMI) of each subject according to the following formula: (weight in kg)/(height in m) 2 . The following terms were defined for subjects by gender and age in months with regard to a (non-Chinese) standard WHO reference population: stunting (height ≥2 SDs below the mean of the reference population for gender and age in months, ie, at the 2.5th percentile or below); overweight (≥1 SD above the mean BMI by age and gender); and obese (≥2 SD above the mean BMI by age and gender). The latter 2 definitions approach the standard adult cut-offs of BMI ≥25 kg/m 2 and BMI ≥30 kg/m 2 respectively as the age of the child approaches 19 years.


Interview Data


All study subjects were administered a Chinese-language questionnaire prior to being told the results of their vision assessment. The basic questionnaire included questions on age, gender, highest educational attainment by either parent, child’s history of glasses wear, and reasons for glasses nonwear. The questionnaire included a Chinese translation of an instrument developed originally by Fletcher and associates, to assess self-reported visual function (VF) in rural Asia. This instrument has previously been validated for use in Chinese subjects, and is described elsewhere in detail.


Statistical Methods


A two-tailed Student t test was applied for group comparison if the data were normally distributed. For skewed data, the Mann–Whitney U test was used. The χ 2 test was employed to compare group differences for categorical variables. The Pearson correlation was used to evaluate the association between spherical equivalent (SE) and height by gender. Moreover, multiple linear regression analysis was performed to examine the association between SE and height and nutritional indicators, adjusting for age and parental education and stratifying by gender. Quantitative data were summarized either in mean (SD) or median (interquartile range).


Statistical analyses were done using SPSS 14.0 (SPSS Inc, Chicago, Illinois, USA). All statistical tests were two-sided, and a P value < .05 was considered statistically significant.




Results


Among 3,226 children in the sample frame in Fuyang secondary schools, 2905 (90.0%) took part in the survey; among those not taking part, 264 (8.2%) failed to obtain parental consent and 57 (1.8%) were absent from school during the survey period ( Figure 1 ). Vision examinations were completed on all but 0.2% of participants, while refraction was carried out on a random 20% sample of children with normal vision (n = 366) and 97% of those with uncorrected VA ≤6/12 in either eye (n = 1,111). Among these 1477 children with refraction data, height and weight were measured for 1371 (92.8%) ( Figure 1 ). These 1371 children form the basis for the remaining analyses.


The mean age of children with complete data was 14.5 ± 1.4 years (range, 12 to 17 years), and 59.8% were girls. The mean SE RE in the better-seeing eye was −1.93 ± 1.82 diopters (D) ( Table 1 ). Children with low vision (VA ≤6/12 in either eye) were older, were significantly more likely to be girls, and had worse RE and self-reported visual function than children with normal vision ( Table 1 ).



TABLE 1

Demographic Characteristics, Vision, and Visual Function for 1371 Rural Chinese Schoolchildren With Complete Data on Refraction, Height, and Weight






















































































































Data Complete (n = 1371) Normal Vision (VA >6/12 Both Eyes) (n = 355, 25.9%) Low Vision (Uncorrected VA ≤6/12 Either Eye) (n = 1016, 74.1%) P value a
Age (years), mean (SD) 14.5 (1.4) 14.1 (1.1) 14.6 (1.4) <.001
Gender, n (%)
Male 551 (40.2%) 184 (51.8%) 367 (36.1%) <.001
Female 820 (59.8%) 171 (48.2%) 649 (63.9%)
Parents’ highest education, n (%)
Primary or below 266 (19.4%) 68 (19.2%) 198 (19.5%) .707
Junior school 708 (51.6%) 179 (50.4%) 529 (52.1%)
High school 272 (19.8%) 77 (21.7%) 195 (19.2%)
College or above 46 (3.4%) 10 (2.8%) 36 (3.5%)
Missing 79 (5.8%) 21 (5.9%) 58 (5.7%)
Uncorrected vision in the better eye, n (%)
≤6/12 753 (54.9%) 0 (0.0%) 753 (74.1%) <.001
>6/12 618 (45.1%) 355 (100.0%) 263 (25.9%)
Presenting vision in the better eye, n (%)
≤6/12 388 (28.3%) 1 (0.3%) 387 (38.1%) <.001
>6/12 983 (71.7%) 354 (99.7%) 629 (61.9%)
Refractive error in the better eye, mean (SD) −1.93 (1.82) −0.48 (0.82) −2.44 (1.80) <.001
Visual function score, mean (SD) 76.1 (16.0) 86.1 (13.0) 72.8 (15.5) <.001

SD = standard deviation; VA = visual acuity.

a P value for the comparison between children with normal vision and low vision.



The mean height and BMI for children with complete data were 156 ± 7 cm and 18.0 kg/m 2 (interquartile range, 16.8 to 19.6 kg/m 2 ) ( Table 2 ). Height and RE were inversely associated (that is, taller children were more myopic) among boys ( r = −0.147; P = .001) but not girls ( r = −0.046,; P = .193) ( Figure 2 ). Height and RE were not significantly associated among boys ( P = .46) or girls ( P = .85) when adjusting for age.



TABLE 2

Analysis of Demographic Characteristics, Vision, Visual Function, and Refractive Error According to Nutritional Status




















































































































































Total Children (n = 1364 a ) Stunted Children b (n = 87) Overweight/Obese Children c (n = 79) Normal Children (n = 1,198) P value d P value e
Age (years), mean (SD) 14.5 (1.4) 14.7 (1.4) 14.0 (1.30) 14.5 (1.3) .002 .260
Gender, n (%)
Male 549 (40.2%) 45 (51.7%) 39 (49.4%) 465 (38.8%) .762 .017
Female 815 (59.8%) 42 (48.3%) 40 (50.6%) 733 (61.2%)
Height (cm), mean (SD) 155.7 (7.4) 144.4 (5.8) 158.0 (6.4) 156.4 (6.8) <.001 <.001
BMI (kg/m 2 ), median (interquartile range) 18.0 (16.8 to 19.6) 17.0 (15.6 to 18.6) 24.1 (23.2 to 25.9) 18.0 (16.8 to 19.3) <.001 <.001
Parents’ highest education, n (%)
Primary or below 263 (19.3%) 23 (26.4%) 14 (17.7%) 226 (18.9%) .106 .170
Junior school 705 (51.7%) 46 (52.9%) 44 (55.7%) 615 (51.3%)
High school 271 (19.9%) 11 (12.6%) 15 (19.0%) 245 (20.5%)
College or above 46 (3.4%) 4 (4.6%) 0 (0.0%) 42 (3.5%)
Missing 79 (5.8%) 3 (3.4%) 6 (7.6%) 70 (5.8%)
Presenting vision in the better eye, n (%)
≤6/12 386 (28.3%) 21 (24.1%) 20 (25.3%) 345 (28.8%) .860 .352
>6/12 978 (71.7%) 66 (75.9%) 59 (74.7%) 853 (71.2%)
Child’s spherical equivalent in the better, mean (SD) −1.93 (1.82) −1.91 (1.81) −1.72 (1.88) −1.94 (1.82) .506 .883
Visual function score, mean (SD) 76.1 (16.0) 76.9 (15.5) 75.6 (13.7) 76.0 (16.2) .590 .659

Only gold members can continue reading. Log In or Register to continue

Stay updated, free articles. Join our Telegram channel

Jan 17, 2017 | Posted by in OPHTHALMOLOGY | Comments Off on Height, Stunting, and Refractive Error Among Rural Chinese Schoolchildren: The See Well to Learn Well Project

Full access? Get Clinical Tree

Get Clinical Tree app for offline access