Title: RE in District Comprehensive Eye Care
1RE in District Comprehensive Eye Care
World Congress on Refractive Error Service
Development
Hasan Minto LV RE Advisor Sightsavers
International
2Introduction
- Magnitude
- Need
- Service delivery
- Infrastructure
- Technology
- Human resource
- Output
- Linkages
3Key Characteristics of Secondary Level
- Has a defined geographical area
- Needs assessment easy
- Administration feasible decentralization,
devolution, etc. - Common social and cultural perspectives
- Language barriers are very few
4Key Characteristics of Secondary Level
- Coordination and cooperation is smooth at
horizontal and vertical levels - Partnerships are innovative and dynamic
- Monitoring is feasible and logistically
manageable - Impact is visible and learning is flexible
5A Case Study of MIEPDistribution by Diagnosis
6Comparison of Presenting and Corrected Distance
Visual Acuities
7Population needing refraction and spectacles in a
total population of 1 millionAnnual Workload
- Children
- 16,000 refraction and spectacles / year
- Adults
- 24,000 refraction and spectacles / year
- Presbyopia
- 35,000 refraction and spectacles / year
8Strategic Needs
- Primary level
- detection and referral of persons with visual
impairment - Vision screening training of PHC workers
- Secondary level
- Refractive (LV) services at district eye units
- Link to affordable and quality optical care
- Sustainable strategies for screening of and
provision of spectacles to 11-15 yrs and
presbyopes
9Secondary Services
- Diagnosis
- Refraction
- Prescription of spectacles
- School and community screening
- Referral
- Outreach
10Placing
- As part of a multi-disciplinary setting
- As part of an eye unit
- As a stand alone facility
- Government
- NGO
- Private
11 District Ophthalmologist 1
District Level Eye Care
Refractionist 1
Institution Based Refraction Low Vision
Ophthalmic Technicians 3
Community Health Workers
Community Based Refraction Screening
Community
12Service Delivery
- Community workers including primary health care
workers, teachers, social workers and families
are first contact for vision assessment and
referrals - Ophthalmic Technicians (OTs) and refractionists
are based in district/sub district eye
units/rural health centres
13Infrastructure
- Institutionalised Service providers
- A refraction room in the hospital/ rural health
centre - Basic equipment for refraction correction i.e.
ophthalmoscope, trial frame set - Spectacles frames and lenses for dispensing
- Readymade spectacles
- Motorbike or vehicle for outreach services
- Non Institutionalised Service Providers
- Optical shop/lab outlet
- Dispensing unit
14Equipment
- Retinoscope
- Trial lens set
- Trial frame
- Cross cylinder
- Vision drums
- Auto-refractor?
15Human Resource and Management
- Optometrist
- Refractionist
- Ophthalmic technician/nurses
- Opticians/optical technicians
- Building capacity at local level for referrals
- Primary health care workers
- School teachers
- Social workers
- Community organizations
- Other service providers
16Training Needs
- Training in retinoscopy
- Subjective refraction
- Screening for eye diseases like cataract,
glaucoma, diabetic retinopathy - Primary eye care
- Dispensing
- Communication skills
- Management skills
17Output
- One refractionist can do 30 refractions / day
manually 302012 7200 / year - The number can go up-to 50 with auto-refractor
502012 12000 / year - Presbyopia can be corrected at community level by
fieldworkers with minimum training and readymade
spectacles
18Output
- One optical technician can fit 20 pairs of
spectacles a day manually 202012 4800 - Or 40 pairs with auto-edgers 402012 9600
- 50 of the prescriptions can be dispensed from a
range of readymade spectacles
19Vertical and Horizontal Linkages
- Vertical between primary, secondary and
tertiary eye care - Horizontal with health care, education,
community, and private sector
20Advocacy
- Involving the local community in screening
- Training opportunities for opticians
- Encouraging the promotion of cost effective
spectacles - Promoting outreach screening camps
- Developing district networking and linkages
between and among service providers - Influencing the local health and district
administration for cushion of funds
21Tertiary Unit
School and Community Screening for Refractive
Errors and Low Vision
Education and Rehabilitation
Cataract Glaucoma Low Vision
Optical services
Social Justice
District Eye Unit
Diagnosis and treatment
Prevention
PEC
Vitamin A Deficiency Refractive Errors Low Vision
Vitamin A Deficiency Corneal Ulcer Trauma
RHC BHU
22Conclusions
- This is the need per million population
- Children
- 16,000 refraction and spectacles / year
- Adults
- 24,000 refraction and spectacles / year
- Presbyopia
- 35,000 refraction and spectacles / year
- How are we going to address this?
- Do we have any starting point?