Elvis Ojaimi
University of Sydney
18 Papers
251 Citations
Elvis Ojaimi is an academic researcher from University of Sydney. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Visual acuity. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 18 publications. Previous affiliations of Elvis Ojaimi include Millennium Institute & Westmead Hospital.
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Papers
Visual Acuity and the Causes of Visual Loss in a Population-Based Sample of 6-Year-Old Australian Children
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the distribution of visual acuity and causes of visual loss in a representative sample of Australian schoolchildren and define visual impairment as any (visual acuity).
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•Journal Article
Visual Acuity and the Causes of Visual Loss in a Population–based Sample of 6–year–old Australian Children
Dana Robaei,Kathryn A. Rose,Elvis Ojaimi,Annette Kifley,Son C. Huynh,Paul Mitchell,Sydney Myopia Study +6 more
TL;DR: A relatively low prevalence of visual impairment in a population of Australian children is documented and astigmatism was the principle refractive error causing visual impairment and was frequently uncorrected.
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Causes and Associations of Amblyopia in a Population-Based Sample of 6-Year-Old Australian Children
TL;DR: A relatively low prevalence of amblyopia in a sample of 6-year-old children is documented and the majority of these children had been diagnosed and treated for this condition.
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Effect of stature and other anthropometric parameters on eye size and refraction in a population-based study of Australian children.
Elvis Ojaimi,Ian G. Morgan,Dana Robaei,Kathryn A. Rose,Wayne Smith,Elena Rochtchina,Paul Mitchell +6 more
TL;DR: A strong association between height and axial length and corneal radius is found, but not spherical equivalent refraction, which may demonstrate the effectiveness of emmetropization in the presence of normal physiological influences.
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Assessment of vision-related quality of life in an older population subsample: The Blue Mountains Eye Study.
TL;DR: The findings from this community-dwelling older population subsample show that the NEI-VFQ-25 differentiates well between various levels of visual impairment with regard to the magnitude of their impact on vision-specific quality of life.
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