| Literature DB >> 32641342 |
Chan Ning Lee1,2, Jacqueline Ramke3,4, Ian McCormick1, Justine H Zhang1,5, Ada Aghaji1,6, Nyawira Mwangi1,7, Helen Burn1,8, Iris Gordon1, Mayinuer Yusufu9, Mingguang He10,11, Juan Carlos Silva12, Matthew J Burton1,13.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Universal health coverage (UHC) includes the dimensions of equity in access, quality services that improve health and protection against financial hardship. Cataract continues to be the leading cause of blindness globally, despite cataract surgery being an efficacious intervention. The aim of this scoping review is to map the nature, extent and global distribution of data on cataract services for UHC in terms of equity, access, quality and financial protection. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: The search will be constructed by an Information Specialist and undertaken in MEDLINE, Embase and Global Health databases. We will include all published non-interventional primary research studies and systematic reviews that report a quantitative assessment of access, equity, quality or financial protection of cataract surgical services for adults at the subnational, national, regional or global level from population-based surveys or routinely collected health service data since 1 January 2000 and published through to February 2020.Screening and data charting will be undertaken using Covidence systematic review software. Titles and abstracts of identified studies will be screened by two authors independently. Full-text articles of potentially relevant studies will be obtained and reviewed independently by two authors against the inclusion criteria. Any discrepancies between the authors will be resolved by discussion, and with a third author as necessary. A data charting form will be developed and piloted on three studies by three authors and amendments made as necessary. Data will be extracted by two reviewers independently and summarised narratively and using maps. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: Ethical approval was not sought as the scoping review will only use published and publicly accessible data. The review will be published in an open access peer-reviewed journal. A summary of the results will be developed for website posting, stakeholder meetings and inclusion in the ongoing Lancet Global Health Commission on Global Eye Health. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: adult surgery; cataract and refractive surgery; epidemiology; ophthalmology; public health
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32641342 PMCID: PMC7348466 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-039458
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Primary and secondary outcomes included in the review, mapped against UHC dimensions
| UHC dimension | Primary cataract indicator | Secondary cataract indicator |
| Access (Coverage)—the availability of good health services within reasonable reach and available at the point of need. | Cataract surgical coverage | Cataract surgical rate |
No of operating surgeons by country | ||
No and distribution of operating centres by country | ||
| Quality—limited to the WHO quality elements of effectiveness and safety | Effective cataract surgical coverage | Cataract surgical outcome |
Complication rates per surgeon/institution | ||
| Financial Protection—direct payments made to obtain health services do not expose people to financial hardship and do not threaten living standards | Rate of Catastrophic Spending on cataract surgery (25% of total household expenditure per WHO) | Cost of cataract Surgery (to patient/household) |
| Rate of Impoverishing Spending on cataract surgery (relative to national or international poverty line) | ||
| Equity—services are accessible to all who need them | Disaggregation of any of the primary or secondary indicators by sex/gender | Disaggregation of any of the primary or secondary indicators by any other PROGRESS factor |
| Place of residence (eg, urban/rural, subnational unit) | ||
| Race/ethnicity/culture/language | ||
| Occupation | ||
| (Gender/sex) | ||
| Religion | ||
| Education | ||
| Socioeconomic status | ||
| Social capital (eg, marital status) |