Use of the World Health Organization primary eye care protocol to investigate the ocular health status of school children in Rwanda

J AAPOS. 2023 Feb;27(1):16.e1-16.e6. doi: 10.1016/j.jaapos.2022.10.008. Epub 2023 Jan 14.

Abstract

Purpose: To assess the ocular health status of primary and secondary schoolchildren in Rwanda and to explore the use of the World Health Organization (WHO) primary eye care screening protocol.

Methods: This was a cross-sectional population-based study across 19 schools in Rwanda. Initial screening was carried out using the WHO screening protocol, whereby visual acuity was measured using a tumbling E Snellen chart (6/60 and 6/12). Abnormal ocular features were identified using a flashlight and history against a checklist. All children with abnormal screening were referred to an on-site ophthalmic clinic for full examination. Those who could not be treated on-site were referred to an ophthalmologist at a hospital for specialist care.

Results: A total of 24,892 children underwent ocular health screening. Of those, 1,865 (7.5%) failed the primary screening; 658 (2.6%) were false positives (35.3% of those who failed screening), and 1,207 (4.8%) true positives. The most frequently observed ocular diagnoses were allergic conjunctivitis (3.11%) and strabismus (0.26%). Refractive error was very rare (0.18%).

Conclusions: The WHO primary eye care curriculum provides existing health personnel with an approach to school-based vision screening that uses a standardized checklist and low-cost resources. In our study cohort, results indicated a low frequency of refractive error; the overwhelming majority of ocular problems could be identified on visual inspection.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Child
  • Conjunctivitis, Allergic*
  • Cross-Sectional Studies
  • Humans
  • Prevalence
  • Refractive Errors* / diagnosis
  • Rwanda
  • Vision Screening* / methods
  • Visual Acuity