Abstract

Owing to the popularization of fundus screening for high-risk prematurity promoted by the state, the prevention and treatment of retinopathy of prematurity (ROP) in China has achieved remarkable results in recent years. Accordingly, the applicable population scope for newborn fundus screening is under heated discussion. Is it better to screen for all neonates or selective high-risk newborns, who meet the national ROP guidelines, have a history of familial or/and hereditary eye diseases or a systemic disease related to the eye after birth, or show an abnormal eye appearance or suspicious eye diseases in the primary care examination? Despite the advantages of general screening in detecting and treating some malignant eye diseases in a timely manner, the conditions for carrying out general newborn screening are not mature, and there are certain risks in the fundus examination of children. This article points out that the rational use of existing scarce medical resources to carry out selective fundus screening for newborns with high risks of eye diseases is practical in clinical work.

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