Centre for Ophthalmology and Visual Science, The University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia.
Lions Eye Institute, 2 Verdun Street, Nedlands, Perth, WA, 6009, Australia.
Int J Equity Health. 2024 Nov 9;23(1):232. doi: 10.1186/s12939-024-02307-z.
Indigenous people in high-income countries have worse eye health outcomes when compared to non-Indigenous people, contributing to ongoing socioeconomic disadvantage. Although services have been designed to address these disparities, it is unclear if they have undergone comprehensive economic evaluation. Our scoping review aimed to identify the number, type, quality, and main findings of such evaluations.
MEDLINE, Embase, Web of Science, Cochrane Library Database, the National Health Service Economic Evaluation Database, EconLit, and relevant grey literature were systematically searched as per our pre-registered protocol. All economic evaluations of real or model services designed to meet the eye care needs of Indigenous populations in high-income countries were included. Two reviewers independently screened studies, extracted data, and assessed quality using the Quality of Health Economic Studies instrument.
We identified 20 studies evaluating services for Indigenous populations in Australia (n = 9), Canada (n = 7), and the United States of America (n = 4). Common services included diabetic retinopathy (DR) screening through fundus photographs acquired in local primary health care clinics (n = 7) or by mobile teams (n = 6), and general eye care through teleophthalmology (n = 2), outreach ophthalmology (n = 2) or an Indigenous health care clinic optometrist (n = 1). These services were economically favourable in 85% of comparisons with conventional alternatives, mainly through reduced costs of travel, in-person consults, and vision loss. Only four studies assessed the benefits of increased patient uptake. Only five included patient evaluations, but none integrated these into their quantitative analysis. Methodological issues included no stated economic perspective (n = 10), no sensitivity analysis (n = 12), no discounting (n = 9), inappropriate measurement of costs (n = 13) or outcomes (n = 5), and unjustified assumptions (n = 15).
Several Indigenous eye care services are cost-effective, particularly remote DR screening. Other services are promising but require evaluation, with attention to avoid common methodological pitfalls. Well-designed evaluations can guide the allocation of scarce resources to services with demonstrated effectiveness and sustainability.
Our scoping review protocol was pre-registered (Open Science Framework DOI: https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/YQKWN ).
与非原住民相比,高收入国家的原住民的眼健康状况较差,这导致了持续的社会经济劣势。尽管已经设计了服务来解决这些差距,但尚不清楚它们是否经过了全面的经济评估。我们的范围综述旨在确定此类评估的数量、类型、质量和主要发现。
根据我们预先注册的方案,系统地检索了 MEDLINE、Embase、Web of Science、Cochrane 图书馆数据库、英国国家卫生服务经济评估数据库、EconLit 和相关灰色文献。纳入了旨在满足高收入国家原住民眼保健需求的真实或模型服务的所有经济评估。两名评审员独立筛选研究,使用健康经济研究质量工具提取数据并评估质量。
我们确定了 20 项评估澳大利亚(n=9)、加拿大(n=7)和美国(n=4)原住民人群服务的研究。常见的服务包括通过在当地初级保健诊所(n=7)或通过移动团队(n=6)获取眼底照片进行糖尿病视网膜病变(DR)筛查,以及通过远程眼科学(n=2)、外展眼科(n=2)或原住民保健诊所验光师(n=1)进行一般眼科护理。与传统替代方案相比,这些服务在 85%的情况下具有经济优势,主要通过减少旅行、面对面咨询和视力丧失的成本来实现。只有四项研究评估了增加患者就诊的益处。只有五项研究包括患者评估,但没有一项将这些评估纳入其定量分析。方法学问题包括未说明经济观点(n=10)、未进行敏感性分析(n=12)、未贴现(n=9)、成本(n=13)或结果(n=5)测量不当以及不合理的假设(n=15)。
几种原住民眼部护理服务具有成本效益,特别是远程 DR 筛查。其他服务具有前景,但需要进行评估,同时要注意避免常见的方法学陷阱。精心设计的评估可以指导将稀缺资源分配给具有已证明有效性和可持续性的服务。
我们的范围综述方案已预先注册(开放科学框架 DOI:https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/YQKWN)。