Primary eye health services for older adults as a component of universal health coverage: a scoping review of evidence from high income countries

Lancet Reg Health West Pac. 2022 Aug 12:35:100560. doi: 10.1016/j.lanwpc.2022.100560. eCollection 2023 Jun.

Abstract

In pursuit of Universal Health Coverage (UHC) for eye health, countries must strengthen services for older adults, who experience the highest prevalence of eye conditions. This scoping review narratively summarised (i) primary eye health services for older adults in eleven high-income countries/territories (from government websites), and (ii) the evidence that eye health services reduced vision impairment and/or provided UHC (access, quality, equity, or financial protection) (from a systematic literature search). We identified 76 services, commonly comprehensive eye examinations ± refractive error correction. Of 102 included publications reporting UHC outcomes, there was no evidence to support vision screening in the absence of follow-up care. Included studies tended to report the UHC dimensions of access (n=70), equity (n=47), and/or quality (n=39), and rarely reported financial protection (n=5). Insufficient access for population subgroups was common; several examples of horizontal and vertical integration of eye health services within the health system were described.

Funding: This work was funded by Blind Low Vision New Zealand for Eye Health Aotearoa.

Keywords: Eye health service; Healthy ageing; Older people; Universal health coverage.

Publication types

  • Review