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The Nigerian national blindness and visual impairment survey: Rationale, objectives and detailed methodology

BACKGROUND: Despite having the largest population in Africa, Nigeria has no accurate population based data to plan and evaluate eye care services. A national survey was undertaken to estimate the prevalence and determine the major causes of blindness and low vision. This paper presents the detailed...

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Autores principales: Dineen, Brendan, Gilbert, Clare E, Rabiu, Mansur, Kyari, Fatima, Mahdi, Abdull M, Abubakar, Tafida, Ezelum, Christian C, Gabriel, Entekume, Elhassan , Elizabeth, Abiose, Adenike, Faal, Hannah, Jiya, Jonathan Y, Ozemela, Chinenyem P, Lee, Pak Sang, Gudlavalleti, Murthy VS
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2572038/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18808712
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2415-8-17
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author Dineen, Brendan
Gilbert, Clare E
Rabiu, Mansur
Kyari, Fatima
Mahdi, Abdull M
Abubakar, Tafida
Ezelum, Christian C
Gabriel, Entekume
Elhassan , Elizabeth
Abiose, Adenike
Faal, Hannah
Jiya, Jonathan Y
Ozemela, Chinenyem P
Lee, Pak Sang
Gudlavalleti, Murthy VS
author_facet Dineen, Brendan
Gilbert, Clare E
Rabiu, Mansur
Kyari, Fatima
Mahdi, Abdull M
Abubakar, Tafida
Ezelum, Christian C
Gabriel, Entekume
Elhassan , Elizabeth
Abiose, Adenike
Faal, Hannah
Jiya, Jonathan Y
Ozemela, Chinenyem P
Lee, Pak Sang
Gudlavalleti, Murthy VS
author_sort Dineen, Brendan
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Despite having the largest population in Africa, Nigeria has no accurate population based data to plan and evaluate eye care services. A national survey was undertaken to estimate the prevalence and determine the major causes of blindness and low vision. This paper presents the detailed methodology used during the survey. METHODS: A nationally representative sample of persons aged 40 years and above was selected. Children aged 10–15 years and individuals aged <10 or 16–39 years with visual impairment were also included if they lived in households with an eligible adult. All participants had their height, weight, and blood pressure measured followed by assessment of presenting visual acuity, refractokeratomery, A-scan ultrasonography, visual fields and best corrected visual acuity. Anterior and posterior segments of each eye were examined with a torch and direct ophthalmoscope. Participants with visual acuity of < = 6/12 in one or both eyes underwent detailed examination including applanation tonometry, dilated slit lamp biomicroscopy, lens grading and fundus photography. All those who had undergone cataract surgery were refracted and best corrected vision recorded. Causes of visual impairment by eye and for the individual were determined using a clinical algorithm recommended by the World Health Organization. In addition, 1 in 7 adults also underwent a complete work up as described for those with vision < = 6/12 for constructing a normative data base for Nigerians. DISCUSSION: The field work for the study was completed in 30 months over the period 2005–2007 and covered 305 clusters across the entire country. Concurrently persons 40+ years were examined to form a normative data base. Analysis of the data is currently underway. CONCLUSION: The methodology used was robust and adequate to provide estimates on the prevalence and causes of blindness in Nigeria. The survey would also provide information on barriers to accessing services, quality of life of visually impaired individuals and also provide normative data for Nigerian eyes.
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spelling pubmed-25720382008-10-24 The Nigerian national blindness and visual impairment survey: Rationale, objectives and detailed methodology Dineen, Brendan Gilbert, Clare E Rabiu, Mansur Kyari, Fatima Mahdi, Abdull M Abubakar, Tafida Ezelum, Christian C Gabriel, Entekume Elhassan , Elizabeth Abiose, Adenike Faal, Hannah Jiya, Jonathan Y Ozemela, Chinenyem P Lee, Pak Sang Gudlavalleti, Murthy VS BMC Ophthalmol Study Protocol BACKGROUND: Despite having the largest population in Africa, Nigeria has no accurate population based data to plan and evaluate eye care services. A national survey was undertaken to estimate the prevalence and determine the major causes of blindness and low vision. This paper presents the detailed methodology used during the survey. METHODS: A nationally representative sample of persons aged 40 years and above was selected. Children aged 10–15 years and individuals aged <10 or 16–39 years with visual impairment were also included if they lived in households with an eligible adult. All participants had their height, weight, and blood pressure measured followed by assessment of presenting visual acuity, refractokeratomery, A-scan ultrasonography, visual fields and best corrected visual acuity. Anterior and posterior segments of each eye were examined with a torch and direct ophthalmoscope. Participants with visual acuity of < = 6/12 in one or both eyes underwent detailed examination including applanation tonometry, dilated slit lamp biomicroscopy, lens grading and fundus photography. All those who had undergone cataract surgery were refracted and best corrected vision recorded. Causes of visual impairment by eye and for the individual were determined using a clinical algorithm recommended by the World Health Organization. In addition, 1 in 7 adults also underwent a complete work up as described for those with vision < = 6/12 for constructing a normative data base for Nigerians. DISCUSSION: The field work for the study was completed in 30 months over the period 2005–2007 and covered 305 clusters across the entire country. Concurrently persons 40+ years were examined to form a normative data base. Analysis of the data is currently underway. CONCLUSION: The methodology used was robust and adequate to provide estimates on the prevalence and causes of blindness in Nigeria. The survey would also provide information on barriers to accessing services, quality of life of visually impaired individuals and also provide normative data for Nigerian eyes. BioMed Central 2008-09-22 /pmc/articles/PMC2572038/ /pubmed/18808712 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2415-8-17 Text en Copyright © 2008 Dineen et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Study Protocol
Dineen, Brendan
Gilbert, Clare E
Rabiu, Mansur
Kyari, Fatima
Mahdi, Abdull M
Abubakar, Tafida
Ezelum, Christian C
Gabriel, Entekume
Elhassan , Elizabeth
Abiose, Adenike
Faal, Hannah
Jiya, Jonathan Y
Ozemela, Chinenyem P
Lee, Pak Sang
Gudlavalleti, Murthy VS
The Nigerian national blindness and visual impairment survey: Rationale, objectives and detailed methodology
title The Nigerian national blindness and visual impairment survey: Rationale, objectives and detailed methodology
title_full The Nigerian national blindness and visual impairment survey: Rationale, objectives and detailed methodology
title_fullStr The Nigerian national blindness and visual impairment survey: Rationale, objectives and detailed methodology
title_full_unstemmed The Nigerian national blindness and visual impairment survey: Rationale, objectives and detailed methodology
title_short The Nigerian national blindness and visual impairment survey: Rationale, objectives and detailed methodology
title_sort nigerian national blindness and visual impairment survey: rationale, objectives and detailed methodology
topic Study Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2572038/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18808712
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2415-8-17
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