Ocular morbidity and health seeking behaviour in Kwara state, Nigeria: implications for delivery of eye care services.

There is currently limited information as to which conditions are most prevalent in communities in developing countries. This makes effective planning of eye services difficult.3,899 eligible individuals were recruited and examined in a cross-sectional survey in Asa Local Government Area, Nigeria. T...

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Main Authors: Laura Senyonjo, Robert Lindfield, Abdulraheem Mahmoud, Kahaki Kimani, Safiya Sanda, Elena Schmidt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4148257?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-2ae347c1520b4b08ac099f543523ea1a2020-11-24T21:26:34ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0198e10412810.1371/journal.pone.0104128Ocular morbidity and health seeking behaviour in Kwara state, Nigeria: implications for delivery of eye care services.Laura SenyonjoRobert LindfieldAbdulraheem MahmoudKahaki KimaniSafiya SandaElena SchmidtThere is currently limited information as to which conditions are most prevalent in communities in developing countries. This makes effective planning of eye services difficult.3,899 eligible individuals were recruited and examined in a cross-sectional survey in Asa Local Government Area, Nigeria. Those who self-reported an ocular morbidity were also asked about their health-seeking behaviour. Health records of local facilities were reviewed to collect information on those presenting with ocular morbidities.25.2% (95% CI: 22.0-28.6) had an ocular morbidity in at least one eye. Leading causes were presbyopia and conditions affecting the lens and conjunctiva. The odds of having an ocular morbidity increased with age and lower educational attainment. 10.1% (7.7-13.0) self-reported ocular morbidity; 48.6% (40.4-56.8) of them reported seeking treatment. At the facility level, 344 patients presented with an ocular morbidity over one month, the most common conditions were red (26.3%) or itchy (20.8%) eyes.Ocular morbidities, including many non vision impairing conditions, were prevalent with a quarter of the population affected. The delivery of eye care services needs to be tailored in order to address this need and ensure delivery in a cost-effective and sustainable manner.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4148257?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Laura Senyonjo
Robert Lindfield
Abdulraheem Mahmoud
Kahaki Kimani
Safiya Sanda
Elena Schmidt
spellingShingle Laura Senyonjo
Robert Lindfield
Abdulraheem Mahmoud
Kahaki Kimani
Safiya Sanda
Elena Schmidt
Ocular morbidity and health seeking behaviour in Kwara state, Nigeria: implications for delivery of eye care services.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Laura Senyonjo
Robert Lindfield
Abdulraheem Mahmoud
Kahaki Kimani
Safiya Sanda
Elena Schmidt
author_sort Laura Senyonjo
title Ocular morbidity and health seeking behaviour in Kwara state, Nigeria: implications for delivery of eye care services.
title_short Ocular morbidity and health seeking behaviour in Kwara state, Nigeria: implications for delivery of eye care services.
title_full Ocular morbidity and health seeking behaviour in Kwara state, Nigeria: implications for delivery of eye care services.
title_fullStr Ocular morbidity and health seeking behaviour in Kwara state, Nigeria: implications for delivery of eye care services.
title_full_unstemmed Ocular morbidity and health seeking behaviour in Kwara state, Nigeria: implications for delivery of eye care services.
title_sort ocular morbidity and health seeking behaviour in kwara state, nigeria: implications for delivery of eye care services.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description There is currently limited information as to which conditions are most prevalent in communities in developing countries. This makes effective planning of eye services difficult.3,899 eligible individuals were recruited and examined in a cross-sectional survey in Asa Local Government Area, Nigeria. Those who self-reported an ocular morbidity were also asked about their health-seeking behaviour. Health records of local facilities were reviewed to collect information on those presenting with ocular morbidities.25.2% (95% CI: 22.0-28.6) had an ocular morbidity in at least one eye. Leading causes were presbyopia and conditions affecting the lens and conjunctiva. The odds of having an ocular morbidity increased with age and lower educational attainment. 10.1% (7.7-13.0) self-reported ocular morbidity; 48.6% (40.4-56.8) of them reported seeking treatment. At the facility level, 344 patients presented with an ocular morbidity over one month, the most common conditions were red (26.3%) or itchy (20.8%) eyes.Ocular morbidities, including many non vision impairing conditions, were prevalent with a quarter of the population affected. The delivery of eye care services needs to be tailored in order to address this need and ensure delivery in a cost-effective and sustainable manner.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4148257?pdf=render
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