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. 2012 Mar;57-341(2):105–135. doi: 10.1016/j.survophthal.2011.08.002

Table 4.

Barriers to Surgery

Authors Study Description Surgical Uptake Barriers
Courtright, 199440 Design: Prospective cohort
Location: Malawi
Number of participants: 29
Follow up period: 9-12 months
37.9%
  • Far distance from main road

  • Not knowing another woman who had received surgery

  • Unilateral TT

  • Not widowed




West et al, 1994 (1)136; Oliva et al, 1997 (2)98,a Design: Prospective cohort
Location: Tanzania
Number of participants: 200
Follow up period:
(1) 2 years and (2) 7 years
18% at 2 years
27.4% at 7 years
  • Lack of symptoms

  • Lack of time

  • Additional costs

  • Lack of escort

  • Children at home

  • Transport difficulties

  • Lack of money

  • Don't want surgery

  • Poor knowledge about service

  • Clinic failures (patient attended)




Bowman et al, 200024 Design: Paired cluster randomized trial of
  • (A)

    Health centre based surgery

  • (B)

    Village based surgery


Location: Gambia
Number of participants: 158
Follow up period: one year
(A) 44%
(B) 66%
(RR, 1.49; 95% CI, 1.11–2.01; p = 0.009)
  • Cost

  • Distance




Rabiu and Abiose, 2001102 Design: Cross-sectional
Location: Nigeria
Number of participants: 101
Follow up period: cross-sectional study
90% (of people with TT had not sought treatment)
  • Cost

  • Lack of symptoms

  • Distance

  • Lack of escort




Bowman et al, 200222 Design: Prospective cohort
Location: Gambia
Number of participants: 148
Follow up period: 12 months
23%
  • Mild symptoms

  • Previous bad surgical experience

  • Fear

  • Happy to epilate

  • Using traditional eye medicines

  • Family opposition

  • Too expensive

  • Lack of time

  • Lack of escort

  • Do not know how to access surgery

  • Seasonal income

  • Geographic

  • Heard radio broadcast

Mahande et al, 200787 Design: Prospective cohort of villages with trachoma education provide by:
  • (A)

    Village leaders

  • (B)

    School teachers


Location: Tanzania
Number of participants: 225
Follow up period: 1 year
44.8% overall
(A) 52.1%
(B) 36.5% in villages served by school teacher education
(RR, 1.4; 95% CI, 0.9–2.1; p = 0.006)
  • Unilateral TT

  • Surgical provision failure

  • Less effective TT surgery education program

  • Geographic

  • Clinic failures (patient attended)




Habte et al, 200861a Design: Case-Control
Location: Ethiopia
Number of participants: 135 cases, 141 controls
Follow up period: n/a
n/a
  • Burden of household chores

  • Indirect costs of surgery

  • Fear of surgery

  • Concerns about surgical outcome

  • Mild symptoms

95% CI = 95% confidence interval; RR = rate ratio; TT = trachomatous trichiasis.

a

Same study population in both studies.