Cataract Surgical Services in Kwara State, Nigeria

Adepoju, F. G. and Patel, Daksha and Ayanniyi, A. A. and Adekoya, B. J. and Omolase, C. O. and Monsudi, K. F. (2014) Cataract Surgical Services in Kwara State, Nigeria. British Journal of Medicine and Medical Research, 4 (20). pp. 3743-3754. ISSN 22310614

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Abstract

Introduction: Service provision for tackling cataract blindness is a key priority and remains a challenge for eye care programs in Nigeria. At the moment, paucity of data on these services makes evaluation and effective planning difficult.
Objective: To evaluate the infrastructure, equipment, and human resources for cataract surgical services, and determine the cataract surgical output in Kwara State, Nigeria.
Materials and Method: A descriptive cross-sectional study of all cataract service institutions in Kwara state was conducted in May-July 2008 using pre-tested questionnaire and on-site review. Output data for 2003-2007 was collected and channels of yearly reporting of cataract surgical output for 2008-2009 established. Descriptive and analytical statistics were performed. For all comparisons, statistical significance was indicated by p<0.05.
Results: There were 14 cataract surgical centres (9 Base Hospitals and 5 Surgical Outreach Centres); all the Base Hospitals were located in the urban centres with over two third cited in Ilorin, the state capital. The state had adequate equipment and infrastructures; however they are mal-distributed in favour of urban areas.
A total of 157 eye care workers comprising 12(7.6%) ophthalmologists (consultants=8, Diplomates=4), 16(10.2%) trainee ophthalmologists, 94(59.9%) mid-level ophthalmic personnel and 35(22.3%) support staff serve the state’s 2.37million people. Eighty per cent of the eye care workers reside in the state capital where less than 30% of the population lives. Cataract surgical output increased from 218 in 2,003 to 1020 in 2009.
Conclusion: There is adequacy of infrastructure, equipment and human resources with improving cataract surgical output. To attain vision 2020 target, mal-distribution of infrastructures, equipment and human resources and poor staff mix need to be addressed. There is urgent need for establishing state- and nation-wide systems for reporting cataract surgical output.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Open STM Article > Medical Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@openstmarticle.com
Date Deposited: 13 Jun 2023 09:31
Last Modified: 22 Jun 2024 09:14
URI: http://asian.openbookpublished.com/id/eprint/1069

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