About 331,700 people suffer from severe visual impairment, representing 1.07 per cent of the country’s population.The Head of the National Eyecare Unit, Institutional Care Division of the Ghana Health Service (GHS), Dr Hornametor Afake, said another 229,400 people, about 0.74 per cent of the population, were totally blind in the country.
The prevalence of blindness is higher in rural areas, making up about 0.79 per cent of the rural population, compared to about 0.67 of the urban population.Dr Afake added that 155,992 or 67.74 per cent of those blind lived in areas with little or no access to quality eye care services.The head of the eyecare unit disclosed these at a press briefing in Accra last Thursday as part of activities commemorating World Sight Day 2022 on the theme: “Love your eyes”.BreakdownPeople who were blind from cataract constituted 54.8 per cent or 126,170 of the blind population; glaucoma accounted for 44,503 people, about 19.4 per cent; posterior segment, 12.9 per cent — 29,822 people, while cornea opacity was 11.2 per cent – 25,234 people.Of the 1.07 per cent who had severe visual impairment, refractive error accounted for 44.4 per cent of the cases, translating into 145,948 people, while cataract constituted 42.2 per cent of the cases, numbering 139,314.InterventionsDr Afake mentioned interventions by his outfit to include promotion, prevention, treatment and rehabilitation, as well as correction of refractive error with spectacles or surgery, and cataract surgery.
He said the GHS, in collaboration with partners in 2018, put in place a national cataract outreach programme (NCOP) to augment efforts at improving cataract surgeries, especially to the underserved.Dr Afake said the programme was supported by the Himalayan Cataract Project, which provided consumables, equipment and other related items to perform over 46,000 cataract surgeries on outreach bases.
As of the first half of 2022, he added that the eye care unit also coordinated surgical outreaches under the programme, covering over 7,000 surgeries.Globally, Dr Afake said at least 2.2 billion people had a near or distance vision impairment, while unaddressed poor vision also resulted in lost productivity of $411 billion.