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Reasons for poor or borderline cataract surgical outcomes at Nkhoma hospital in Malawi: a retrospective analysis

Cataract is the main cause of blindness worldwide. Cataract surgery is the most effective intervention for cataract blindness. However, poor or borderline outcomes following cataract surgery reduces the effectiveness of this strategy to eliminate this cause of avoidable blindness. This study aimed t...

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Main Author: Chingwengwe, Martha
Other Authors: Minnies, Deon
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Division of General Surgery 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Chingwengwe, Martha
author2 Minnies, Deon
author_browse Chingwengwe, Martha
Minnies, Deon
author_facet Minnies, Deon
Chingwengwe, Martha
author_sort Chingwengwe, Martha
collection Thesis
description Cataract is the main cause of blindness worldwide. Cataract surgery is the most effective intervention for cataract blindness. However, poor or borderline outcomes following cataract surgery reduces the effectiveness of this strategy to eliminate this cause of avoidable blindness. This study aimed to determine the reasons for poor or borderline cataract surgical outcomes in people who had undergone cataract surgery. This was a retrospective analysis of theatre records of people who had undergone cataract surgery at Nkhoma Hospital between January and December 2019. All people that recorded a post-operative visual acuity of 6/18 and worse in either or both eyes were included in the study. Data was collected on variables concerning demographics, aspects of referral, preoperative examination, intraoperative findings and post- operative examination. The study determined that 52.2% of poor or borderline cataract surgical outcomes at Nkhoma Hospital were because of ocular comorbidity known to cause vision loss and other comorbidity likely to affect vision adversely, 25.8% because of uncorrected refractive error (post-operative visual acuity with pinhole improved to 6/18 or better) and 3.7% because of intra-operative complications. For a total of 13.5% of the poor and borderline surgery outcome cases, no reasons could be determined with the data available. The study revealed that the reasons for poor or borderline surgery outcome at Nkhoma Hospital are complex and are influenced by decision-making about whether to perform the surgery, regardless of pre-operative visual acuity findings, presence of co-morbidities or the reasonable expectation to deliver an improved outcome following surgery. This emphasizes the need for improved knowledge and skills about referrals, pre-operative screening, post-operative follow-up and allocation of workloads to members of the entire cataract surgical service team.
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language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/40828 Reasons for poor or borderline cataract surgical outcomes at Nkhoma hospital in Malawi: a retrospective analysis Chingwengwe, Martha Minnies, Deon Kalua, Khumbo surgery Cataract is the main cause of blindness worldwide. Cataract surgery is the most effective intervention for cataract blindness. However, poor or borderline outcomes following cataract surgery reduces the effectiveness of this strategy to eliminate this cause of avoidable blindness. This study aimed to determine the reasons for poor or borderline cataract surgical outcomes in people who had undergone cataract surgery. This was a retrospective analysis of theatre records of people who had undergone cataract surgery at Nkhoma Hospital between January and December 2019. All people that recorded a post-operative visual acuity of 6/18 and worse in either or both eyes were included in the study. Data was collected on variables concerning demographics, aspects of referral, preoperative examination, intraoperative findings and post- operative examination. The study determined that 52.2% of poor or borderline cataract surgical outcomes at Nkhoma Hospital were because of ocular comorbidity known to cause vision loss and other comorbidity likely to affect vision adversely, 25.8% because of uncorrected refractive error (post-operative visual acuity with pinhole improved to 6/18 or better) and 3.7% because of intra-operative complications. For a total of 13.5% of the poor and borderline surgery outcome cases, no reasons could be determined with the data available. The study revealed that the reasons for poor or borderline surgery outcome at Nkhoma Hospital are complex and are influenced by decision-making about whether to perform the surgery, regardless of pre-operative visual acuity findings, presence of co-morbidities or the reasonable expectation to deliver an improved outcome following surgery. This emphasizes the need for improved knowledge and skills about referrals, pre-operative screening, post-operative follow-up and allocation of workloads to members of the entire cataract surgical service team. 2025-01-23T10:59:36Z 2025-01-23T10:59:36Z 2024 2025-01-23T10:56:47Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MPH http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40828 eng application/pdf Division of General Surgery Faculty of Health Sciences University of Cape Town
spellingShingle surgery
Chingwengwe, Martha
Reasons for poor or borderline cataract surgical outcomes at Nkhoma hospital in Malawi: a retrospective analysis
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Reasons for poor or borderline cataract surgical outcomes at Nkhoma hospital in Malawi: a retrospective analysis
title_full Reasons for poor or borderline cataract surgical outcomes at Nkhoma hospital in Malawi: a retrospective analysis
title_fullStr Reasons for poor or borderline cataract surgical outcomes at Nkhoma hospital in Malawi: a retrospective analysis
title_full_unstemmed Reasons for poor or borderline cataract surgical outcomes at Nkhoma hospital in Malawi: a retrospective analysis
title_short Reasons for poor or borderline cataract surgical outcomes at Nkhoma hospital in Malawi: a retrospective analysis
title_sort reasons for poor or borderline cataract surgical outcomes at nkhoma hospital in malawi a retrospective analysis
topic surgery
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40828
work_keys_str_mv AT chingwengwemartha reasonsforpoororborderlinecataractsurgicaloutcomesatnkhomahospitalinmalawiaretrospectiveanalysis