Spectacle Compliance in Slum Population of Mumbai: Pilot

Published: October 3, 2016

Authors

Prema Chande, Tupti Khaladkar, Sweta Patel, Vinit Shah

Keywords
Spectacle Compliance, refractive errors for adults, urban slum population

Abstract

Background Mumbai Eye Care campaign was a mega refractive error project implemented for the slum population of Mumbai from 2009-15. The project was supported by Standard Chartered Bank’s CSR activity Seeing is Believing through Sightsavers. The project design and service delivery was implemented by Lotus College of Optometry. During the first 3 years of the project, spectacles were distributed free of cost to adults by only collecting case paper charge of Rs.10/-/ Hence a questionnaire based study was conducted to assess the spectacle compliance among this population. Methodology Spectacle Compliance questionnaire was designed, validated by Optometry faculty and the same was administered by an Optometry intern. The spectacle compliance and reasons for non compliance was analysed for 200 respondents. Results: Spectacle compliance was found to be 73.48%. Conclusion: Spectacle compliance was found to be high in this study and was single vision near spectacle design showed better compliance.

References

[1] Castanon Holguin et al. Factors Associated with Spectacle-Wear Compliance in School-Aged Mexican children. IOVS, March 2006, Vol. 47, No. 3
[2] Congdon N, Zheng M, Sharma A. Prevalence and determinants of spectacle nonwear among rural Chinese secondary schoolchildren: the Xichang Pediatric Refractive Error Study Report 3. Arch Ophthalmol. 2008 Dec;126(12):1717–23.
[3] D. Robaei, K. Rose, A. Kifley, P. Mitchell, Patterns of Spectacle Use in Young Australian School Children: Findings from a Population-Based Study, JAAPOS, Volume 9, Issue 6, Pages 579–583
[4] Fotouhi A, Hashemi H, Raissi B, Mohammad K et al. Uncorrected refractive errors and spectacle utilisation rate in Tehran: the unmet need. Br J Ophthalmol. 2006 May;90(5):534–7. Epub 2006 Feb 17
[5] Horwood et al. Compliance with first-time spectacle wear in children under eight years of age. Eye. 1998;12 ( Pt 2):173–8
[6] I Patel et al, Change in function and spectacle-use 2 months after providing presbyopic spectacles in rural Tanzania. Br JOphthalmol 2010;94:685689 doi:10.1136/bjo.2008.145607
[7] L Keay & Gandhi M et al. A randomized clinical trial to evaluate ready-made spectacles in an adult population in India. Br J Ophthalmol 2010;94:685–689 doi:10.1136/bjo.2008.145607.
[8] Suemaru Junko; Hasebe Satoshi; Ohtsuki Hiroshi et al. Visual symptoms and compliance with spectacle wear in myopic children: double-masked comparison between progressive addition lenses and single vision lenses. Acta medica Okayama 2008;62(2):109–17.
[9] Odedra et al Barriers to spectacle use in Tanzanian Ophthalmic Epidemiol. 2008 Nov-Dec;15(6):410–7.
[10] Wedner, H Masanja, R Bowman et al. Two strategies for correcting refractive errors in school students in Tanzania: randomised comparison, with implications for screening programmes. J Ophthalmol 2008;92:19– 24 doi:10.1136/bjo.2007.119198
[11] Zeng, Keay, Mingguang et al. A Randomized, Clinical Trial Evaluating Ready-Made and Custom Spectacles Delivered Via a School-Based Screening Program in China. doi:10.1016/j.ophtha.2009.04.004

How to Cite

Prema Chande, Tupti Khaladkar, Sweta Patel, Vinit Shah. Spectacle Compliance in Slum Population of Mumbai: Pilot. J. Multidiscip. Res. Healthcare. 2016, 03, 37-42
Spectacle Compliance in Slum Population of Mumbai: Pilot

Current Issue

PeriodicityBiannually
Issue-1October
Issue-2April
ISSN Print2393-8536
ISSN Online2393-8544
RNI No.CHAENG/2014/57978
OA Policy

Publisher's policy of the journal at Sherpa UK for the submitted, accepted, and published articles. Click OAPolicy

Plan-S Compliance

To check compliance, one has to use the Journal Check Tool (JCT). This tool provided by cOAlition S (European funders) for the researchers (fundee) to check the compliance with the journal.

Recommend journal to your library

You can recommend the journal being a researcher or faculty member to your library. We will post a copy of the Journal to your library on your behalf at free of cost.
Click here: Recommend Journal

Preprint Arxiv Submission

The authors are encouraged to submit the author’s copy (preprint) to appropriate preprint archives e.g. https://arxiv.org and/or on https://indiarxiv.org or institutional repositories (e.g., D Space) before paper acceptance by the editor of Journal. After publications of the paper author(s) should mention the citation information, title and abstract along with DOI number of the publication carefully on the required page of the depository(ies).

Contact:

Phone: +91-172-2741000, +91-172-4691800
Email : editor.jmrh@chitkara.edu.in

Abstract and Indexing

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Articles in Journal of Multidisciplinary Research in Healthcare by Chitkara University Publications are Open Access articles that are published with licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution- CC-BY 4.0 International License. Based on a work at https://jmrh.chitkara.edu.in/. This license permits one to use, remix, tweak and reproduction in any medium, even commercially provided one give credit for the original creation.

View Legal Code of the above-mentioned license, https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode

View Licence Deed here https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Creative Commons License

Journal of Multidisciplinary Research in Healthcare by Chitkara University Publications is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Based on a work at https://jmrh.chitkara.edu.in/

Members