Strategies to address inequity of uncorrected refractive error in the Western Pacific: A modified Delphi process.

Ian McCormick ORCID logo ; Kelvin Tong ; Nurliyana Abdullah ORCID logo ; Carmen Abesamis-Dischoso ; Theresa Gende ; Effendy Bin Hashim ORCID logo ; S May Ho ; Isabelle Jalbert ORCID logo ; Belmerio Jeronimo ; Elenoa Matoto-Raikabakaba ; +13 more... Koichi Ono ; Prabhath Nishantha Piyasena ; Jaymie T Rogers ; John Szetu ; Minh Anh Tran ; Dennis Yan-Yin Tse ORCID logo ; Ye Win ; Tiong Peng Yap ORCID logo ; Sangchul Yoon ; Mayinuer Yusufu ; Matthew J Burton ORCID logo ; Jacqueline Ramke ORCID logo ; Promoting Equity in Refractive Error Services in the Western Pac ; (2024) Strategies to address inequity of uncorrected refractive error in the Western Pacific: A modified Delphi process. Ophthalmic & physiological optics, 44 (6). pp. 1148-1161. ISSN 0275-5408 DOI: 10.1111/opo.13348
Copy

PURPOSE: Uncorrected refractive error is the leading cause of vision impairment globally; however, little attention has been given to equity and access to services. This study aimed to identify and prioritise: (1) strategies to address inequity of access to refractive error services and (2) population groups to target with these strategies in five sub-regions within the Western Pacific. METHODS: We invited eye care professionals to complete a two-round online prioritisation process. In round 1, panellists nominated population groups least able to access refractive error services, and strategies to improve access. Responses were summarised and presented in round 2, where panellists ranked the groups (by extent of difficulty and size) and strategies (in terms of reach, acceptability, sustainability, feasibility and equity). Groups and strategies were scored according to their rank within each sub-region. RESULTS: Seventy five people from 17 countries completed both rounds (55% women). Regional differences were evident. Indigenous peoples were a priority group for improving access in Australasia and Southeast Asia, while East Asia identified refugees and Oceania identified rural/remote people. Across the five sub-regions, reducing out-of-pocket costs was a commonly prioritised strategy for refraction and spectacles. Australasia prioritised improving cultural safety, East Asia prioritised strengthening school eye health programmes and Oceania and Southeast Asia prioritised outreach to rural areas. CONCLUSION: These results provide policy-makers, researchers and funders with a starting point for context-specific actions to improve access to refractive error services, particularly among underserved population groups who may be left behind in existing private sector-dominated models of care.


picture_as_pdf
McCormick-etal-2024-Strategies-to-address-inequity-of-uncorrected-refractive-error-in-the-WesternPacific.pdf
subject
Published Version
Available under Creative Commons: Attribution 4.0

View Download

Atom BibTeX OpenURL ContextObject in Span Multiline CSV OpenURL ContextObject Dublin Core Dublin Core MPEG-21 DIDL Data Cite XML EndNote HTML Citation JSON MARC (ASCII) MARC (ISO 2709) METS MODS RDF+N3 RDF+N-Triples RDF+XML RIOXX2 XML Reference Manager Refer Simple Metadata ASCII Citation EP3 XML
Export

Downloads