Eye-glasses wear compliance following school-based visual acuity screening in Nepal: a comparative study

Authors

  • Hari Bahadur Thapa Lumbini Eye Institute, Siddharthanagar, Bhairahawa, Nepal
  • Salma KC Rai Lumbini Eye Institute, Siddharthanagar, Bhairahawa, Nepal
  • Saraswati Khadka Thapa Lumbini Eye Institute, Siddharthanagar, Bhairahawa, Nepal
  • Anadi Khatri Birat Eye Hospital, Biratnagar, Nepal
  • Ken Bassett SEVA Canada and University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3126/nepjoph.v12i1.25736

Keywords:

Children, Compliance, Spectacles, Visual acuity.

Abstract

Introduction: Eye-glasses wear compliance is found to be low among children in school-based eye screening programs who are provided spectacles free of charge.

Methods: Thirty-six schools from school visual acuity screening program in Nepal were randomly selected to receive no follow-up (standard) or follow-up by an optometry team at 3 months. In the intervention group (that received the follow-up), ophthalmic personal made unannounced visits to the schools at 3 months to determine spectacle compliance .Direct examination to determine compliance with spectacle wear 6 months was done. The primary reason for noncompliance from a list of possibilities was identified using a questionnaire.

Results: Among 297 (145 control and 152 intervention) students that received glasses in the 36 schools, 128/152 (84%) were available for examination at 3 months in the intervention group. A total of 216/297 (73%) students were available for examination at 6 months (73 % and 72% of the control and intervention groups, respectively). Within the intervention group, 51% of children at 3 months and 57% at 6 months were wearing glasses during the unannounced visits. The main source of refractive error was myopia. Out of 66 children with astigmatism, 24 (36%) were wearing glasses. There was no statistically significant difference in compliance (p=0.85) between private and public schools, but compliance correlated better with the educational status of careers.

Conclusion: A follow-up visit to the school by eye care personnel did not improve spectacle wear compliance among children .Other factors may also be responsible for poor compliance.

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Published

2020-07-26

How to Cite

Thapa, H. B., Rai, S. K., Thapa, S. K., Khatri, A., & Bassett, K. (2020). Eye-glasses wear compliance following school-based visual acuity screening in Nepal: a comparative study. Nepalese Journal of Ophthalmology, 12(1), 91–98. https://doi.org/10.3126/nepjoph.v12i1.25736

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Section

Original Articles