M Kawuma1. 1. Department of Ophthalmology, Makerere University Medical School, P.O. Box 7072, Kampala, Uganda.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To determine the prevalence and causes of the blindness and ocular morbidity amongst Sudanese refugees; to prioritise and provide eye care services to the refugees and; to device administrative strategies and logistics of prevention and control of blinding diseases among the refugees. DESIGN: A mobile outreach clinic study for six weeks. SETTING: Adjumani settlement camps for Sudanese refugees in Uganda. PARTICIPANTS: Seven hundred patients in eighteen settlement camps. INTERVENTIONS: Medical treatment and surgical correction offered. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Cataract, trachoma and xerophthalmia are the major causes of blindness. RESULTS: One hundred and forty six patients (21%) were bilaterally blind, and 77 patients (11%) were unilaterally blind. The three leading causes of blindness are cataract (42%), xerophthalmia (28%) and trachoma (21%). Glaucoma and other non-specified causes were responsible for the remaining blindness (9%). The crude prevalence of blindness among the 700 patients was 20. This is an extremely high prevalence, nearly ten times higher than for Ugandans living in Uganda. CONCLUSION: In refugee settlement camps setting, residents may have a much higher prevalence of eye diseases and blindness than non-refugees.
OBJECTIVES: To determine the prevalence and causes of the blindness and ocular morbidity amongst Sudanese refugees; to prioritise and provide eye care services to the refugees and; to device administrative strategies and logistics of prevention and control of blinding diseases among the refugees. DESIGN: A mobile outreach clinic study for six weeks. SETTING: Adjumani settlement camps for Sudanese refugees in Uganda. PARTICIPANTS: Seven hundred patients in eighteen settlement camps. INTERVENTIONS: Medical treatment and surgical correction offered. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Cataract, trachoma and xerophthalmia are the major causes of blindness. RESULTS: One hundred and forty six patients (21%) were bilaterally blind, and 77 patients (11%) were unilaterally blind. The three leading causes of blindness are cataract (42%), xerophthalmia (28%) and trachoma (21%). Glaucoma and other non-specified causes were responsible for the remaining blindness (9%). The crude prevalence of blindness among the 700 patients was 20. This is an extremely high prevalence, nearly ten times higher than for Ugandans living in Uganda. CONCLUSION: In refugee settlement camps setting, residents may have a much higher prevalence of eye diseases and blindness than non-refugees.
Authors: Munir Ahmed; Noelle Whitestone; Jennifer L Patnaik; Mohammad Awlad Hossain; Lutful Husain; Mohammed Alauddin; Mushfiqur Rahaman; David Hunter Cherwek; Nathan Congdon; Danny Haddad Journal: PLoS Med Date: 2020-03-31 Impact factor: 11.069