Psychosocial characteristics of candidates for the prospective evaluation of radial keratotomy (PERK) study
L. B. Bourque, R. Rubenstein, B. Cosand, G. O. Waring 3rd, S. Moffitt, H. Gelender, P. R. Laibson, R. L. Lindstrom, M. McDonald, W. D. Myers and al. et
The National Eye Institute Prospective Evaluation of Radial Keratotomy
(PERK) Study is a multicenter clinical trial for the evaluation of radial
keratotomy. This article describes the questionnaire data collected on PERK
patients and compares them with a similar group of myopic persons studied
during the Rand Health Insurance Experiment (heretofore referred to as the
Rand study). The PERK patients are young, white myopes who dislike being
dependent on corrective lenses but perceive themselves to be more visually
impaired than do comparable Rand study myopes. Most female subjects and a
plurality of the male subjects have tried contact lenses and quit wearing
them mainly because use of the lenses was inconvenient or bothersome. There
is no evidence that patients are psychologically or socially deviant. Both
male and female subjects expressed a fear of being without vision and cited
impatience with the lenses as their major motivation for wanting surgery.