| Literature DB >> 35283961 |
Abstract
Background: Global estimate reported that 1.4 million children are blind of which three-quarters live in developing countries. Childhood Visual Impairment is a major public health problem globally especially in rural areas of developing countries. Objective: To review barriers to accessing paediatric eye care services in African countries.Entities:
Keywords: Africa; Paediatric eye care; accessibility; affordability; availability; refractive errors; visual impairment
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 35283961 PMCID: PMC8889803 DOI: 10.4314/ahs.v21i4.47
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Afr Health Sci ISSN: 1680-6905 Impact factor: 0.927
Search keywords used for systemic review of barriers for accessing childhood eye care services in African countries
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| Visual Impairment/ Vision Impairment* Refractive Error/ Myopia* Avoidable blindness/ Ocular |
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| Accessibility of paediatric eye care* Health seeking/ Eye care seeking* affordability/ cost* Access/ |
Figure 2Flowchart used for the systematic review of barriers to accessing paediatric eye care services in African countries
Studies identified in the systemic review about barriers to accessing paediatric eye care services in African countries
| Study | Country | Study design | Study sample | Barriers identified |
| Agarwal | Multi-country | Cross-sectional | 27 health tertiary | Availability, accessibility and |
| Alrasheed et al., 2018 | Sudan | Qualitative | 18 eye-care providers | Availability, accessibility and |
| Sukati | Swaziland | Mixed | 9 eye health facilities | Availability, accessibility and |
| Ebeigbe 2018 | Nigeria | Qualitative | 35 parents and 10 eye- | Parents behaviour |
| Alrasheed, | Sudan | Quantitative and | 387 Pupils and 47 | KAP of the students and their |
| Sukati, | Swaziland | Quantitative | 173 parents | KAP of parents |
| Ugalahi, | Nigeria | Quantitative | 164 children | affordability |
| Chan, | Tanzania | Quantitative-(Prospective) | 1051 participants | Parents behaviour |
| Sukati, | Swaziland | Quantitative | 15 public eye health | Availability and accessibility of |
| Amiebenomo, | Nigeria | Quantitative | 468 parents | KAP parents |
| Oguego, | Nigeria | Quantitative | 833 Students | Eye health misconceptions |
| Nyamai, | Kenya | Quantitative | 1390 students | KAP of students towards RE |
| Belaynew, | Ethiopia | Quantitative | 1315 households | KAP of community towards |
| Wanyama 2013 | Kenya | Descriptive | 125 pediatricians | KAP of child eye disease among |
| Ayanniyi, | Nigeria | Quantitative | 1,393 guardians | Guardians' attitude towards eye |
| Kumah, | Ghana | Hospital-based | 100 mothers | Knowledge |
| Alemayehu, | Ethiopia | Institution-based | 565 primary school | KAP and associated factors |
| Ebeigbe, | Nigeria | Qualitative | 35 parents | Parents knowledge about their |
| Alrasheed | Sudan | School-based | 387 Students and 47 | Attitudes and perceptions |
| Isawumi, | Nigeria | Descriptive cross- | 405 respondents | Perceptions, towards treatment |
| Odedra, | Tanzania | Qualitative | 8 focus groups | Barriers to spectacle use |
| Mafwiri, | Tanzania | Comparison study | 45 Clinical Officers | Accessibility child eye health |
| Chan, | South Africa | Qualitative | 93 Children | Attitude and perceptions |
| Faderin and Ajaiyeoba | Nigeria | Quantitative | 919 pupils | Barriers to acceptance of wearing |
| Megbelayin 2013 | Nigeria | Quantitative | 1,241 pupils | Barriers to acceptance of |
| Kotb, | Egypt | Descriptive | 100 children | Attitudes and perception |
| Schulze | Malawi | Qualitative study | 58 parents | Barriers to acceptance of free |
| Shirima | Tanzania | Qualitative study | 117 parents | Barriers of pediatric cataract |
| Alrasheed 2020 | Sudan | Quantitative | 80 schoolteachers | Teachers' Perspectives about |