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Epidemiology and visual outcomes of ocular injuries in a low resource country


Emmanuel K Abu
Stephen Ocansey
Jennifer A Gyamfi
Michael Ntodie
Enyam KA Morny

Abstract

Background: Ocular injury is a major cause of ocular morbidity and unilateral visual impairment and represents a consid- erable public health concern especially in low resource societies.


Objective: To evaluate the epidemiology and visual outcomes of ocular injuries in southern Ghana.


Methods: A retrospective hospital-based case series was conducted. Information on new cases of ocular injuries were re- trieved and parameters including time between injury occurrence and reporting to the clinic, presenting visual acuity (VA), and the best corrected final VA were investigated and visual outcomes were assessed.


Results: Most (50.2%) of the patients reported to the hospital after a day of sustaining an ocular injury; workplace injuries, older patients and farm-related injuries were most likely to report after a day of sustaining an injury. A significant proportion (40.4%) of patients reported with good presenting vision (6/6-6/18) which increased to 56.7% after treatment; 45.3% of patients reported with visual impairment (<6/18) and reduced to 42.4% after treatment. Farming (AOR = 4.5, p = 0.02), reporting after a day of sustaining injury (AOR = 78, p< 0.001), workplace injuries (AOR = 3.1, p = 0.007) and roadside injuries (AOR = 3.1, p = 0.02) were associated with poor visual outcomes. Initial VA 6/18 or better was the highest predictor of good visual outcome.


Conclusion: There is a shift in the pattern of ocular injury occurrence from work-related to home- related.


Keywords: Epidemiology; visual outcome; ocular injuries; incidence; Ghana.


Journal Identifiers


eISSN: 1729-0503
print ISSN: 1680-6905