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Articles

Trends in cataract surgical rate and resource utilisation in Egypt

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Pages 351-357 | Received 24 Apr 2017, Accepted 24 May 2018, Published online: 08 Jun 2018
 

ABSTRACT

Purpose: To describe cataract services in Egypt and explore resources and practices in public and private sectors.

Methods: The study was conducted between June and August 2015. All facilities in the country providing cataract services were contacted to obtain information on surgeries performed in 2014. Hospitals performing eye surgery in Quena, Sharkia, and Fayoum regions were visited and a questionnaire on resources for cataract surgery was completed.

Results: Cataract surgery was offered in the public sector by 64 government and 16 university teaching hospitals and in the private sector by 101 hospitals. Over 90% of all facilities in the country contacted participated in the study. In 2014, the national cataract surgical rate (CSR) was 3674 varying in governorates from 7579 in Ismailia to 402 in Suez. The private sector performed 70% of cataract surgeries.

Analysis of three regions showed an 11.7% increase in cataract output between 2010 and 2014. The average number of cataract surgeries per unit in 2014 was 2272 in private, 1633 in university, and 824 in government hospitals. Private hospitals had 60% of human resources for eye care. Phacoemulsification was the surgical technique in 85.6% of private, 72.1% of university, and 41% of government hospitals.

Reasons explaining the differences in output between public and private sectors were the lack of trainers, supervisors, and incentives.

Conclusion: The private sector provides most of the cataract services in Egypt, resulting in inadequate services for the poor. There is a 15-fold variation in CSR between the best and least served regions. The public sector could increase cataract output by improving training, supervision, and incentives.

Conflicts of interest

None of the following authors has any proprietary interests or conflicts of interest related to this submission.

This submission has not been published anywhere previously and is not simultaneously being considered for any other publication.

Additional information

Funding

This research was funded by the Kirkpatrick Scholarship, awarded to the first author by the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

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