Clinical and Social Features of Patients with Eye Injuries Admitted to a Tertiary Hospital: A Five-Year Retrospective Study from Crete, Greece
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
3-18-2023
Publication Title
Healthcare (Basel)
Abstract
Eye injuries are a major cause of visual disability worldwide and may present a burden to both quality of life of the sufferers and healthcare services. The aim of this study was to extract and triangulate information on the demographic, clinical, and social features of eye-injured adult patients admitted to a tertiary hospital in Greece. The design was a five-year retrospective study of eye-injured adult patients, admitted to the General University Hospital of Heraklion, Crete (GUHH), the single tertiary referral hospital on the island. Drawing the profile of eye-injured patients may add to future health planning. Data collected from 1 January 2015 to 31 December 2019, such as sociodemographic features and clinical information, were extracted. One hundred twenty-eight patients were included. Of those, there was no available information on activity during injury for 6 patients, 78 (60.9%) had work-related ocular injuries, and 44 (34.4%) had non-work-related ocular injuries. Patients with no current formal employment, those who were retired, and formally unemployed and manual force workers had the higher rates of work-related injuries. The most common work-related injuries were closed globe injuries, specifically contusions, while ruptures and penetrating wounds were the most frequent of the open globe injuries. Within the univariate analyses, work-related eye injuries were significantly associated with male gender, middle age, and the place related to daily work activity. Determinants of poor final visual acuity (VA) were the initial VA, the type of injury (
Volume
11
Issue
6
First Page
885
Recommended Citation
Kyriakaki EDO, Detorakis ET, Bertsias AK, Tsakalis NG, Karageorgiou I, Chlouverakis G, et al. Clinical and social features of patients with eye injuries admitted to a tertiary hospital: a five-year retrospective study from Crete, Greece. Healthcare (Basel). 2023 Mar 18;11(6):885. doi: 10.3390/healthcare11060885. PMID: 36981542.
DOI
10.3390/healthcare11060885
ISSN
2227-9032
PubMed ID
36981542