Palmer Jennifer J, Chinanayi Farai, Gilbert Alice, Pillay Devan, Fox Samantha, Jaggernath Jyoti, Naidoo Kovin, Graham Ronnie, Patel Daksha, Blanchet Karl
International Centre for Eye Health Clinical Research Department, Faculty of Infectious & Tropical Diseases, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, Keppel St,, London WC1B 7HT, UK.
Hum Resour Health. 2014 Aug 15;12:44. doi: 10.1186/1478-4491-12-44.
Development of human resources for eye health (HReH) is a major focus of the Global Action Plan 2014 to 2019 to reduce the prevalence of avoidable visual impairment by 25% by the year 2019. The eye health workforce is thought to be much smaller in sub-Saharan Africa than in other regions of the world but data to support this for policy-making is scarce. We collected HReH and cataract surgeries data from 21 countries in sub-Sahara to estimate progress towards key suggested population-based VISION 2020 HReH indicators and cataract surgery rates (CSR) in 2011.
Routinely collected data on practitioner and surgery numbers in 2011 was requested from national eye care coordinators via electronic questionnaires. Telephone and e-mail discussions were used to determine data collection strategies that fit the national context and to verify reported data quality. Information was collected on six practitioner cadres: ophthalmologists, cataract surgeons, ophthalmic clinical officers, ophthalmic nurses, optometrists and 'mid-level refractionists' and combined with publicly available population data to calculate practitioner to population ratios and CSRs. Associations with development characteristics were conducted using Wilcoxon rank sum tests and Spearman rank correlations.
HReH data was not easily available. A minority of countries had achieved the suggested VISION 2020 targets in 2011; five countries for ophthalmologists/cataract surgeons, four for ophthalmic nurses/clinical officers and two for CSR. All countries were below target for optometrists, even when other cadres who perform refractions as a primary duty were considered. The regional (sample) ratio for surgeons (ophthalmologists and cataract surgeons) was 2.9 per million population, 5.5 for ophthalmic clinical officers and nurses, 3.7 for optometrists and other refractionists, and 515 for CSR. A positive correlation between GDP and CSR as well as many practitioner ratios was observed (CSR P = 0.0042, ophthalmologists P = 0.0034, cataract surgeons, ophthalmic nurses and optometrists 0.1 > P > 0.05).
With only a minority of countries in our sample having reached suggested ophthalmic cadre targets and none having reached targets for refractionists in 2011, substantially more targeted investment in HReH may be needed for VISION 2020 aims to be achieved in sub-Saharan Africa.
眼健康人力资源开发是《2014 - 2019年全球行动计划》的重点,该计划旨在到2019年将可避免视力损害的患病率降低25%。人们认为撒哈拉以南非洲的眼健康工作人员数量比世界其他地区少得多,但缺乏支持这一观点以供决策参考的数据。我们收集了撒哈拉以南21个国家的眼健康人力资源和白内障手术数据,以评估2011年在基于人群的关键“视觉2020”眼健康人力资源指标和白内障手术率(CSR)方面的进展。
通过电子问卷向国家眼保健协调员索取2011年从业人员和手术数量的常规收集数据。通过电话和电子邮件讨论来确定适合各国国情的数据收集策略,并核实所报告的数据质量。收集了关于六种从业人员类别的信息:眼科医生、白内障外科医生、眼科临床干事、眼科护士、验光师和“中级验光师”,并结合公开可得的人口数据来计算从业人员与人口的比率以及白内障手术率。使用Wilcoxon秩和检验和Spearman秩相关分析与发展特征的关联。
眼健康人力资源数据不易获取。少数国家在2011年实现了“视觉2020”建议目标;眼科医生/白内障外科医生方面有5个国家达标,眼科护士/临床干事方面有4个国家达标,白内障手术率方面有2个国家达标。所有国家的验光师人数均未达到目标,即使将其他主要从事验光工作的类别考虑在内也是如此。外科医生(眼科医生和白内障外科医生)的区域(样本)比率为每百万人口2.9人,眼科临床干事和护士为5.5人,验光师和其他验光人员为3.7人,白内障手术率为每百万人口515例。观察到国内生产总值与白内障手术率以及许多从业人员比率之间存在正相关(白内障手术率P = 0.0042,眼科医生P = 0.0034,白内障外科医生、眼科护士和验光师0.1>P>0.05)。
在我们的样本中,只有少数国家达到了建议的眼科人员目标,2011年没有国家达到验光人员目标,若要在撒哈拉以南非洲实现“视觉2020”目标,可能需要对眼健康人力资源进行更多有针对性的投资。