Investigation of current guidelines for prescribing spectacles to children using a modified Delphi approach and the AGREE II tool

Author:

Wilson Salma1ORCID,Suttle Catherine1ORCID,Shah Rakhee1ORCID,Conway Miriam1ORCID,Ctori Irene1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Optometry and Visual Science City, University of London London UK

Abstract

AbstractPurposeThis study aimed to identify clinical guidelines that provide recommendations on prescribing refractive error correction in children, evaluate the overall quality of these guidelines using the Appraisal of Guidelines for REsearch and Evaluation II (AGREE II) tool and subsequently gain consensus on the prescribing recommendations from high‐quality guidelines using the modified Delphi technique.MethodsA comprehensive search for prescribing guidelines was conducted using databases and professional websites. The quality appraisal of eligible guidelines was undertaken by scoring the six AGREE II domains. Subsequently, the modified Delphi technique was used by 10 experts (sub‐specialist optometrists, ophthalmologists and orthoptists) to gain consensus on the prescribing recommendation statements extracted from guidelines that had been identified as high quality. Three rounds were conducted in which agreement of these statements were scored using a 9‐point Likert scale with a free‐text option for any additional comments.ResultsFive eligible guidelines were identified. The AGREE II tool demonstrated that the guidelines varied substantially in quality, with only one guideline identified as being of high quality. A total of 168 prescribing statements were reviewed in the Delphi procedure. Of these, 95 statements reached expert consensus as being appropriate prescribing recommendations.ConclusionThere is significant scope for improving current guidelines for prescribing refractive error correction in children. We used the modified Delphi technique to find points of agreement on prescribing recommendations to support professionals prescribing refractive error correction in children. We recommend that further work is needed to address gaps in the guidelines.

Publisher

Wiley

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