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Ocular Morbidity among Refugees in Southwest Ethiopia

BACKGROUND: Low vision and blindness are recognized as one of the major public health problems worldwide, especially in developing countries. The prevalence and cause of blindness and low vision vary from region to region, among different age and population groups in a country or geographical region...

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Autores principales: Gelaw, Yeshigeta, Abateneh, Aemero
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Research and Publications Office of Jimma University 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4141226/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25183929
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author Gelaw, Yeshigeta
Abateneh, Aemero
author_facet Gelaw, Yeshigeta
Abateneh, Aemero
author_sort Gelaw, Yeshigeta
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Low vision and blindness are recognized as one of the major public health problems worldwide, especially in developing countries. The prevalence and cause of blindness and low vision vary from region to region, among different age and population groups in a country or geographical region. The objective of this study is thus to determine the causes of blindness and ocular morbidity among refugees in Southwest Ethiopia. METHODS: A cross-sectional clinic based study was conducted on 1,054 refugees in Southwest Ethiopia. A basic anterior and posterior segment examination was done by ophthalmologists with Magnifying Loupe 2.5X and Direct Ophthalmoscope. Data were analyzed using SPSS version 16.0. RESULTS: The most common causes of ocular morbidity identified were trachoma 547(21.2%), cataract 501(19.4%), refractive error 353(13.7%), conjunctivitis 240(9.3%), glaucoma 130(5.1%) and climatic droplet keratopathy 112(4.4%). The overall prevalence of blindness was 26.2% and the prevalence of childhood blindness was 0.7%. The prevalence was higher among females (16.9%) than males (9.3%) and age groups 60 years and above (15.9%) than other age groups (10.3%) (P<0.05). The overall prevalence of low vision was 25.8% and the prevalence of low vision in pediatric age group was 0.9%. The leading causes of blindness were cataract 112(40.6%), trachomatous corneal opacity 58(21.0%) and glaucoma 49(17.8%). The commonest cause of low vision was cataract 102(37.6%) followed by trachomatous corneal opacity 49(18.1%) and refractive error 35(12.9%). CONCLUSIONS: There is a very high burden of blinding eye diseases among refugees. Integrated multidisciplinary intervention strategies for the prevention and control of blindness and low vision in the study settings should be initiated.
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spelling pubmed-41412262014-09-02 Ocular Morbidity among Refugees in Southwest Ethiopia Gelaw, Yeshigeta Abateneh, Aemero Ethiop J Health Sci Original Article BACKGROUND: Low vision and blindness are recognized as one of the major public health problems worldwide, especially in developing countries. The prevalence and cause of blindness and low vision vary from region to region, among different age and population groups in a country or geographical region. The objective of this study is thus to determine the causes of blindness and ocular morbidity among refugees in Southwest Ethiopia. METHODS: A cross-sectional clinic based study was conducted on 1,054 refugees in Southwest Ethiopia. A basic anterior and posterior segment examination was done by ophthalmologists with Magnifying Loupe 2.5X and Direct Ophthalmoscope. Data were analyzed using SPSS version 16.0. RESULTS: The most common causes of ocular morbidity identified were trachoma 547(21.2%), cataract 501(19.4%), refractive error 353(13.7%), conjunctivitis 240(9.3%), glaucoma 130(5.1%) and climatic droplet keratopathy 112(4.4%). The overall prevalence of blindness was 26.2% and the prevalence of childhood blindness was 0.7%. The prevalence was higher among females (16.9%) than males (9.3%) and age groups 60 years and above (15.9%) than other age groups (10.3%) (P<0.05). The overall prevalence of low vision was 25.8% and the prevalence of low vision in pediatric age group was 0.9%. The leading causes of blindness were cataract 112(40.6%), trachomatous corneal opacity 58(21.0%) and glaucoma 49(17.8%). The commonest cause of low vision was cataract 102(37.6%) followed by trachomatous corneal opacity 49(18.1%) and refractive error 35(12.9%). CONCLUSIONS: There is a very high burden of blinding eye diseases among refugees. Integrated multidisciplinary intervention strategies for the prevention and control of blindness and low vision in the study settings should be initiated. Research and Publications Office of Jimma University 2014-07 /pmc/articles/PMC4141226/ /pubmed/25183929 Text en Copyright © Jimma University, Research & Publications Office 2014
spellingShingle Original Article
Gelaw, Yeshigeta
Abateneh, Aemero
Ocular Morbidity among Refugees in Southwest Ethiopia
title Ocular Morbidity among Refugees in Southwest Ethiopia
title_full Ocular Morbidity among Refugees in Southwest Ethiopia
title_fullStr Ocular Morbidity among Refugees in Southwest Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Ocular Morbidity among Refugees in Southwest Ethiopia
title_short Ocular Morbidity among Refugees in Southwest Ethiopia
title_sort ocular morbidity among refugees in southwest ethiopia
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4141226/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25183929
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