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Supply-side determinants of cataract surgery output in South Africa

Background Globally, cataracts represent the leading cause of blindness1. Although South Africa meets the Vision 2020: Right to Sight target of ophthalmologists per million population2, it has not met the target of performing 2,000 cataract surgeries per million population to address avoidable catar...

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Main Author: Marais, Charl
Other Authors: Minnies, Deon
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Division of General Surgery 2026
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access_status_str Open Access
author Marais, Charl
author2 Minnies, Deon
author_browse Marais, Charl
Minnies, Deon
author_facet Minnies, Deon
Marais, Charl
author_sort Marais, Charl
collection Thesis
description Background Globally, cataracts represent the leading cause of blindness1. Although South Africa meets the Vision 2020: Right to Sight target of ophthalmologists per million population2, it has not met the target of performing 2,000 cataract surgeries per million population to address avoidable cataract blindness3-5. Aim: To explore the supply-side determinants of cataract surgery output by examining provider characteristics and perceived barriers, enablers, and strategies to increase surgical volume. Methods: A cross-sectional study, using an emailed online questionnaire, was performed using convenience sampling on 399 medically trained members of the Ophthalmology Society of South Africa (OSSA) between May and June 2024. Results: The study's response rate was 19.7% (79/399). In 2023, nearly half of the surgeons performed fewer than 200 cataract surgeries, while only 15% performed 500 or more. Factors associated with performing ≥201 cataract surgeries were: male gender, experience, working in the private sector, performing phacoemulsification cataract surgery and spending less time on non-surgical responsibilities.(p <0.05). The most frequently reported barriers to increasing surgical output were non-surgical responsibilities (28%), limited theatre time (25%), patient access issues (24%), and inconsistent consumable supplies (22%), especially in the public sector. Having adequate theatre staff (56%), dedicated eye theatres (49%), equipment (43%), and motivated staff (41%) were the main enablers identified. Participants recommended strategies such as increasing theatre utilisation (24%), ensuring a stable supply of consumables (24%) and improving staff motivation (19%) to increase cataract surgery in South Africa. Conclusions: Cataract surgery output in South Africa is inadequate. Addressing reported provider barriers, promoting enablers and implementation strategies identified will likely improve surgeon utilisation and increase cataract surgery output rates in the country. Contribution: Provider's cataract surgery output and views of barriers, enablers and implementation strategies to improve cataract surgery output in South Africa.
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language English
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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:11427/42526 Supply-side determinants of cataract surgery output in South Africa Marais, Charl Minnies, Deon Geneau, Robert Surgery South Africa Background Globally, cataracts represent the leading cause of blindness1. Although South Africa meets the Vision 2020: Right to Sight target of ophthalmologists per million population2, it has not met the target of performing 2,000 cataract surgeries per million population to address avoidable cataract blindness3-5. Aim: To explore the supply-side determinants of cataract surgery output by examining provider characteristics and perceived barriers, enablers, and strategies to increase surgical volume. Methods: A cross-sectional study, using an emailed online questionnaire, was performed using convenience sampling on 399 medically trained members of the Ophthalmology Society of South Africa (OSSA) between May and June 2024. Results: The study's response rate was 19.7% (79/399). In 2023, nearly half of the surgeons performed fewer than 200 cataract surgeries, while only 15% performed 500 or more. Factors associated with performing ≥201 cataract surgeries were: male gender, experience, working in the private sector, performing phacoemulsification cataract surgery and spending less time on non-surgical responsibilities.(p <0.05). The most frequently reported barriers to increasing surgical output were non-surgical responsibilities (28%), limited theatre time (25%), patient access issues (24%), and inconsistent consumable supplies (22%), especially in the public sector. Having adequate theatre staff (56%), dedicated eye theatres (49%), equipment (43%), and motivated staff (41%) were the main enablers identified. Participants recommended strategies such as increasing theatre utilisation (24%), ensuring a stable supply of consumables (24%) and improving staff motivation (19%) to increase cataract surgery in South Africa. Conclusions: Cataract surgery output in South Africa is inadequate. Addressing reported provider barriers, promoting enablers and implementation strategies identified will likely improve surgeon utilisation and increase cataract surgery output rates in the country. Contribution: Provider's cataract surgery output and views of barriers, enablers and implementation strategies to improve cataract surgery output in South Africa. 2026-01-09T12:05:34Z 2026-01-09T12:05:34Z 2025 2026-01-05T06:55:46Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters Masters http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42526 en eng application/pdf Division of General Surgery Faculty of Health Sciences University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Surgery
South Africa
Marais, Charl
Supply-side determinants of cataract surgery output in South Africa
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Supply-side determinants of cataract surgery output in South Africa
title_full Supply-side determinants of cataract surgery output in South Africa
title_fullStr Supply-side determinants of cataract surgery output in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Supply-side determinants of cataract surgery output in South Africa
title_short Supply-side determinants of cataract surgery output in South Africa
title_sort supply side determinants of cataract surgery output in south africa
topic Surgery
South Africa
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42526
work_keys_str_mv AT maraischarl supplysidedeterminantsofcataractsurgeryoutputinsouthafrica