Passer au contenu de la page principale

Unmet eye care needs among a Syrian paediatric refugee population

Mon statut pour la session

Quoi:
Paper Presentation | Présentation d'article
Quand:
1:35 PM, Dimanche 16 Juin 2019 (8 minutes)
Où:
Thème:
Santé publique et ophtalmologie mondiale

Authors: Tarek A. Bin Yameen, Myrna Lichter
Author Disclosure Block: T.A. Bin Yameen: None. M. Lichter: None.


Abstract Body:

Purpose: There is a lack of data on vision problems in a paediatric refugee population in Canada. Given the recent arrival of 40,000 Syrian refugees, we performed a cross-sectional, descriptive study to assess the prevalence of visual impairment and unmet eye care needs of Syrian refugee children in Toronto.

Study Design: Five single-day clinics were organized. Enrolment was offered to Syrian refugees registered with resettlement agencies, not for profit organizations, and/or private sponsorship groups.

Methods: Through a structured interview from the accompanying legal guardian, socio-demographics, medical history, subjective visual acuity, and access to eye care information was collected. Comprehensive visual screening, slit-lamp, dilated direct funduscopy, and refractions were performed. Visual acuity data was compared to Canadian prevalence data. χ2 tests were used for statistical analysis.

Results: 526 (65.8%) out of the 800 adults and children offered enrollment participated in the study. 278 paediatric patients were examined. The median age was 8 years (interquartile range (IQR)= 5-11) and 52% were females. Most patients lived outside Syria as refugees for 1 to 5 years (75.5%) and were enrolled in elementary school or less (48.9%). The prevalence of reported uncorrected vision problems was 17.2% for distance vision, 4.7% for near vision, and 0.7% for both distance and near vision, including loss of vision. A majority had not visited an eye specialist in the past year (95.3%) and 25.2% of parents were dissatisfied with their children’s vision. The presenting visual acuity in the better-seeing eye was 20/50 or worse in 5.8% (95% CI, 3.6%- 9.3%). By using pin-hole correction, this improved to 5.5% (95% CI, 3.3%-8.8%). Compared to the Canadian population (0.17%), Syrian refugee children were 32 times more likely to have 20/50 vision or worse (p< 0.01). The most common finding was refractive error in 25.9% (95% CI, 20.9%-31.5%). Six-year old Syrian children were 4 times more likely to suffer from myopia compared to their Canadian counterparts (26.1% v. 6.4%, p< 0.01). The prevalence of non-refractive error was 7.6% (95% CI, 4.7%-11.3%). The most frequent non-refractive errors were cataracts (1.8%), strabismus (1.8%), glaucoma (1.1%), and traumatic corneal scaring (0.07%).

Conclusions: This is the first study to assess ocular health in a paediatric refugee population in Canada. Syrian refugee children have a high prevalence of visual impairment, even when living within a system of universal healthcare. Vision-screening programs and accessible eye clinics may address this need.


Myrna Lichter

Participant.e

Mon statut pour la session

Évaluer

Detail de session
Pour chaque session, permet aux participants d'écrire un court texte de feedback qui sera envoyé à l'organisateur. Ce texte n'est pas envoyé aux présentateurs.
Une fois activée, vous pouvez choisir d'afficher la liste des participants pour chaque session. Seuls les participants ayant accepté de rendre leur profil public seront affichés.
Activez cette option pour afficher la liste des participants sur la page de cette session. Ce paramètre s'applique uniquement à cette session.

Les modifications effectuées ici affecteront toutes les pages de détails des sessions sauf indication contraire