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Beware the Heat – Living in Warm Temperatures Linked to Severe Vision Problems in Older Americans - SciTechDaily

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A recent study suggests that older Americans (65 years and older) residing in warmer regions have a higher risk of serious vision impairment compared to those in cooler areas. The cause behind this temperature-vision impairment correlation remains unknown, though potential reasons include UV light exposure, air pollution, and infections.

In a study involving 1.7 million elderly Americans, individuals residing in counties with an average temperature exceeding 60 °F faced a significantly increased risk of severe vision problems compared to those in cooler areas.

According to a recent study published in the journal Ophthalmic Epidemiology, American adults aged 65 and above residing in warmer areas are at a higher risk of severe vision problems compared to those in cooler regions.

Residents living in counties with an average temperature of 50-54.99°F faced a 14% increased risk of severe vision impairment compared to those in counties averaging below 50°F (< 10 °C). This risk rose to 24% for residents in counties with temperatures between 55-59.99°F, and surged to 44% for those in areas averaging 60°F (15.5 °C) or higher.

“This link between vision impairment and average county temperature is very worrying if future research determines that the association is causal,” says first author Professor Esme Fuller-Thomson, “With climate change, we are expecting a rise in global temperatures. It will be important to monitor if the prevalence of vision impairment among older adults increases in the future.”  Dr. Fuller-Thomson is the director of the University of Toronto’s Institute of Life Course and Aging and is a Professor in the Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work and the Department of Family and Community Medicine.

“We know that vision problems are a major cause of disabilities and functional limitations,” says co-author ZhiDi Deng, a recent pharmacy graduate from the University of Toronto, “Serious vision impairment, for example, can increase the risk of falls, fractures, and negatively impact older adults’ quality of life. Taking care of vision impairments and their consequences also cost the US economy tens of billions each year. So, this link between temperature and vision impairment was quite concerning.”

Impact of age, sex, income, and education

The relationship between average temperature and severe vision impairment was strong regardless of age, sex, income, and education of participants.

“It was powerful to see that the link between vision impairment and temperature was consistent across so many demographic factors including income.” says co-author Elysia Fuller-Thomson, a graduate student at the University of Toronto.

The association between higher county temperature and serious vision impairment was stronger for individuals aged 65 to 79 compared to those 80 or older, males compared to females, and White Americans compared to Black Americans.

Causes remain a mystery

The observed link between average temperature and severe vision impairment may be strong, but the mechanism behind this relationship remains a mystery.

The study’s authors hypothesize several potential causes for the observed relationship, including increased ultraviolet light exposure, air pollution, infections, and folic acid degradation with increased temperature. However, the design of this study does not provide definitive insight into how temperature affects vision.

The study was based on six consecutive waves of the American Community Survey (2012-2017) which surveyed a nationally representative sample of American respondents aged 65 and older annually. The sample analyzed included 1.7 million community-dwelling and institutionalized older adults in the coterminous US who lived in the same state in which they were born. The question on vision impairment was “Is this person blind or does he/she have serious difficulty seeing even when wearing glasses?” Average temperature data was obtained from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and combined with data from the American Community Survey.

“We were very surprised to discover this strong association between temperature and vision impairment,” says Esme Fuller-Thomson. “But this novel finding introduces more questions than it answers, including what the connection between average county temperature and vision impairment is. Moving forward, we plan to investigate whether county temperature is also associated with other disabilities among older adults such as hearing problems and limitations in daily activities.”

Reference: “Association Between Area Temperature and Severe Vision Impairment in a Nationally Representative Sample of Older Americans” by Esme Fuller-Thomson, ZhiDi Deng, and Elysia G. Fuller-Thomson, 20 June 2023, Ophthalmic Epidemiology.
DOI: 10.1080/09286586.2023.2221727

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