| Literature DB >> 31614715 |
Jacqueline Ramke1,2, Fatima Kyari3, Nyawira Mwangi4,5, Mmpn Piyasena6,7, Gvs Murthy8,9, Clare E Gilbert10.
Abstract
The Sustainable Development Goals aim to leave no one behind. We explored the hypothesis that women without a living spouse-including those who are widowed, divorced, separated, and never married-are a vulnerable group being left behind by cataract services. Using national cross-sectional blindness surveys from Nigeria (2005-2007; n = 13,591) and Sri Lanka (2012-2014; n = 5779) we categorized women and men by marital status (married/not-married) and place of residence (urban/rural) concurrently. For each of the eight subgroups we calculated cataract blindness, cataract surgical coverage (CSC), and effective cataract surgical coverage (eCSC). Not-married women, who were predominantly widows, experienced disproportionate cataract blindness-in Nigeria they were 19% of the population yet represented 56% of those with cataract blindness; in Sri Lanka they were 18% of the population and accounted for 54% of those with cataract blindness. Not-married rural women fared worst in access to services-in Nigeria their CSC of 25.2% (95% confidence interval, CI 17.8-33.8%) was far lower than the best-off subgroup (married urban men, CSC 80.0% 95% CI 56.3-94.3); in Sri Lanka they also lagged behind (CSC 68.5% 95% CI 56.6-78.9 compared to 100% in the best-off subgroup). Service quality was also comparably poor for rural not-married women-eCSC was 8.9% (95% CI 4.5-15.4) in Nigeria and 37.0% (95% CI 26.0-49.1) in Sri Lanka. Women who are not married are a vulnerable group who experience poor access to cataract services and high cataract blindness. To "leave no one behind", multi-faceted strategies are needed to address their needs.Entities:
Keywords: cataract services; effective cataract surgical coverage; health equity; health inequality; healthy aging; universal eye health; universal health coverage; widowhood
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31614715 PMCID: PMC6843674 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16203854
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Marital status in women and men across age groups in (a) Nigeria (2005–2007) and (b) Sri Lanka (2012–2014).
Figure 2Prevalence of cataract blindness across social subgroups of women and men aged ≥40 years in (a) Nigeria (2005–2007) and (b) Sri Lanka (2012–2014). For each subgroup, the prevalence of cataract blindness is plotted along the y axis, and the proportion of the sample in each subgroup is indicated under the x-axis. For example, in Nigeria 14% of the sample were rural not-married women. The number above each bar indicates the proportion of all cataract blindness in the subgroup, for example, in Nigeria 48% of the cataract blind were rural not-married women. R = rural, U = urban, NM = not-married, * = very few urban not-married men in Nigeria, ** = zero urban not-married men with cataract blindness in Sri Lanka.
Figure 3Cataract surgical coverage (CSC) and effective cataract surgical coverage (eCSC) across social subgroups of women and men aged ≥40 years in (a) Nigeria (2005–2007) and (b) Sri Lanka (2012–2014). CSC, eCSC, and their 95% CI are shown by the vertical bar for each subgroup. CSC target 80% [20], eCSC target 60% [21]. The CSC value in married urban women and men and urban not-married men in Sri Lanka was 100%, as was eCSC in urban not-married men. In Nigeria, zero not-married urban men had surgery.