Eye health indicators for universal health coverage: results of a global expert prioritisation process

Author:

McCormick IanORCID,Mactaggart IslayORCID,Resnikoff SergeORCID,Muirhead Debbie,Murthy GV,Silva Juan Carlos,Bastawrous AndrewORCID,Stern Jude,Blanchet KarlORCID,Wang NingliORCID,Yusufu MayinuerORCID,Cooper Andrew,Gichangi MichaelORCID,Burton Matthew JORCID,Ramke JacquelineORCID,

Abstract

IntroductionIn its recent World Report on Vision, the WHO called for an updated approach to monitor eye health as part of universal health coverage (UHC). This project sought to develop a consensus among eye health experts from all world regions to produce a menu of indicators for countries to monitor eye health within UHC.MethodsWe reviewed the literature to create a long-list of indicators aligned to the conceptual framework for monitoring outlined in WHO’s World Report on Vision. We recruited a panel of 72 global eye health experts (40% women) to participate in a two-round, online prioritisation exercise. Two-hundred indicators were presented in Round 1 and participants prioritised each on a 4-point Likert scale. The highest-ranked 95 were presented in Round 2 and were (1) scored against four criteria (feasible, actionable, reliable and internationally comparable) and (2) ranked according to their suitability as a ‘core’ indicator for collection by all countries. The top 30 indicators ranked by these two parameters were then used as the basis for the steering group to develop a final menu.ResultsThe menu consists of 22 indicators, including 7 core indicators, that represent important concepts in eye health for 2020 and beyond, and are considered feasible, actionable, reliable and internationally comparable.ConclusionWe believe this list can inform the development of new national eye health monitoring frameworks, monitor progress on key challenges to eye health and be considered in broader UHC monitoring indices at national and international levels.

Funder

Wellcome Trust

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Sensory Systems,Ophthalmology

Reference25 articles.

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3. World Health Organization . Global initiative for the elimination of avoidable blindness: action plan 2006-2011, 2007. Available: https://www.iapb.org/wp-content/uploads/VISION-2020-Action-Plan-2006-2011.pdf [Accessed 05 Aug 2020].

4. World Health Organization . Universal eye health: a global action plan 2014-2019, 2013. Available: https://www.who.int/blindness/AP2014_19_English.pdf [Accessed 21.08 2019].

5. World Health Organization . Catalogue of key eye health indicators in the African region, 2017. Available: https://www.afro.who.int/publications/catalogue-key-eye-health-indicators-african-region [Accessed 26 Nov 2019].

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