Abstract

Ready-made spectacles are low-cost spectacles for correcting refractive errors in children who would otherwise have their refractive errors uncorrected due to lack of availability and affordability of conventional, expensive custom-made spectacles. Thus, this study seeks to estimate the proportion of children with uncorrected refractive errors eligible for ready-made spectacles in a school-based programme. A school-based descriptive cross-sectional study was employed to screen children aged 12-15 years in eighteen public junior high schools within the Bongo district of Ghana. Children who failed the 6/9 acuity test were refracted and given spectacles. Ready-made spectacle was prescribed when visual acuity improved by ≥2 lines in at least one eye with full correction (astigmatism of ≤0.75D); spherical equivalent corrected visual acuity to ≤1 line worse than best corrected visual acuity with full correction in the better eye; and there was ≤1.00D difference between the two eyes. A total of 1,705 school children were examined. Of this number, 30 (1.8%; 95% CI: 1.2-2.5%) met the criteria for refractive correction but none had any. Twenty-six (86.7%; 95% CI: 69.7-95.3%) were found to be eligible for ready-made spectacles (power range: -1.50D to +1.00D, mean spherical equivalent ± SD = -0.27D ± 0.79D) while 4 (13.3%; 95% CI: 4.7-30.3%) were not, hence, given custom-made spectacles. A binary logistic regression analysis revealed that the odds of being eligible for one type of spectacles was similar between males and females (OR: 1.1; 95% CI: 0.1-12.7; p = 0.93). A large proportion of students who met the criteria for spectacle correction could be corrected with ready-made spectacles. There is, therefore, the need for these spectacles to be considered an appropriate alternative for refractive error correction during school eye health programmes.

Highlights

  • Uncorrected refractive error remains the leading cause of visual impairment in children in both developed [1, 2] and developing countries [3,4,5,6]

  • This study investigated the proportion of school children with uncorrected refractive errors in the Bongo District of the Upper East Region of Ghana that are eligible for ready-made spectacles to address the adherence to spectacle wear due to the lack of accessibility and affordability

  • This was a school-based descriptive cross-sectional study in Ghana to assess the proportion of students with uncorrected refractive errors that can benefit from ready-made spectacles and to the best of the authors’ knowledge, this is the first study on ready-made spectacles among school children in Ghana

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Summary

Introduction

Uncorrected refractive error remains the leading cause of visual impairment in children in both developed [1, 2] and developing countries [3,4,5,6].

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