Abstract

Disability-disaggregated data are increasingly considered important to monitor progress in Universal Eye Health Care. Hospital-based data are still elusive because of the cultural ambiguities of the term disability, especially in under-resourced Health Information Systems in low-and middle-income countries. The aim of this study was to estimate the hospital-based rate of disability in patients presenting at an eye department of a rural hospital in Paraguay and to discuss implications for the management of access barriers. Therefore, we introduced two standardized sets of the Washington Group (WG) Questions as a pilot project. In total, 999 patients answered the self-report WG short set (WG-SS) questionnaire with six functional domains, and 501 of these patients answered an extended set, which included additional domains for “anxiety” and “depression” (WG-ES3). Overall, 27.7% (95% Confidence Interval (CI) 24.9–30.3) were categorized as having a disability. A total of 9.6% (95% CI 7.9–11.6) were categorized as having a disability because of communication difficulties, which was second only to visual difficulties. The odds ratio for disability for patients aged 70 years and older was 8.5 (95% CI 5.0–14.4) and for male patients, it was 0.83 (95% CI 0.62–1.1). Of those patients who answered the WG-ES3, 3.4% were categorized as having a disability because of being worried, nervous or anxious and 1.4% because of feeling depressed. An analysis of the questions of the “depression” domain was impeded by a high rate of measurement errors. The results of the different domains can now be used to inform the identification and mitigation of potential access barriers to eye health services for different types of impairments.

Highlights

  • Universal access and equity of eye health services are salient cross-cutting principles of theWorld Health Organization (WHO)’s global action plan 2014–2019 [1]

  • A total of 22 questionnaire responses were not included in the analysis as they were erroneously conducted with parents of children aged less than five years

  • 3.6% of the patients who answered the extended set Washington Group (WG)-ES 3 were categorized as having a psycho-social disability in the anxiety domain, and this was 1.4% in the depression domain

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Universal access and equity of eye health services are salient cross-cutting principles of theWorld Health Organization (WHO)’s global action plan 2014–2019 [1]. Universal access and equity of eye health services are salient cross-cutting principles of the. [2,3,4] People with disabilities are “likely to experience health inequities” [5], but data about their access to eye health services are still elusive [6]. This is concerning because people with disabilities make up a significant proportion of the global population. The monitoring of equity-oriented Universal Health Care is not possible if health systems do not provide more accurate information about people with disabilities accessing health services [7].

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call