TY - JOUR KW - AIDS-Related Opportunistic Infections KW - Africa South of the Sahara KW - Blindness KW - Cataract KW - Diabetic Retinopathy KW - Eye Injuries KW - Female KW - Forecasting KW - Glaucoma KW - Health Services Accessibility KW - Humans KW - leprosy KW - Male KW - Needs Assessment KW - Onchocerciasis, Ocular KW - Patient Acceptance of Health Care KW - Population Surveillance KW - Prevalence KW - Refractive Errors KW - Trachoma KW - Vitamin A Deficiency AU - Lewallen S AU - Courtright P AB -
AIM: To review the prevalence and causes of blindness in sub-Saharan Africa, the existing services and limitations, and the Vision 2020 goals for the future.
METHODS: Methodologically sound population based surveys published in the past 20 years are reviewed and results for prevalence and causes of blindness are tabulated. The current resources and needs according to recent publications and international working groups are described.
CONCLUSIONS: Blindness prevalence rates vary widely but the evidence suggests that approximately 1% of Africans are blind. The major cause is cataract; trachoma and glaucoma are also important causes of blindness. The bulk of blindness in the region is preventable or curable. Efforts should focus on eye problems which are universally present and for which there are cost effective remedies, such as cataract and refractive problems and on those problems which occur focally and can be prevented by primary healthcare measures, such as trachoma, onchocerciasis, and vitamin A deficiency. Major development of staffing levels, infrastructure, and community programmes will be necessary to achieve Vision 2020 goals.
BT - The British journal of ophthalmology C1 - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11466240?dopt=Abstract DA - 2001 Aug DO - 10.1136/bjo.85.8.897 IS - 8 J2 - Br J Ophthalmol LA - eng N2 -AIM: To review the prevalence and causes of blindness in sub-Saharan Africa, the existing services and limitations, and the Vision 2020 goals for the future.
METHODS: Methodologically sound population based surveys published in the past 20 years are reviewed and results for prevalence and causes of blindness are tabulated. The current resources and needs according to recent publications and international working groups are described.
CONCLUSIONS: Blindness prevalence rates vary widely but the evidence suggests that approximately 1% of Africans are blind. The major cause is cataract; trachoma and glaucoma are also important causes of blindness. The bulk of blindness in the region is preventable or curable. Efforts should focus on eye problems which are universally present and for which there are cost effective remedies, such as cataract and refractive problems and on those problems which occur focally and can be prevented by primary healthcare measures, such as trachoma, onchocerciasis, and vitamin A deficiency. Major development of staffing levels, infrastructure, and community programmes will be necessary to achieve Vision 2020 goals.
PY - 2001 SP - 897 EP - 903 T2 - The British journal of ophthalmology TI - Blindness in Africa: present situation and future needs. UR - https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1724094/pdf/v085p00897.pdf VL - 85 SN - 0007-1161 ER -