Background: Bilateral cataract is a significant cause of blindness in Ethiopia. This study aimed to identify the resources available for cataract surgery in children, and to assess current surgical practices, surgical output and factors affecting the outcome of surgery in Ethiopia.
Methods: A Google Forms mobile phone questionnaire was emailed to nine ophthalmologists known to perform cataract surgery in young children.
Results: All nine responded. All but one had received either 12- or 3-5-month’s training in pediatric ophthalmology with hands-on surgical training. The other surgeon had received informal training from an experienced colleague and visiting ophthalmologists. Five worked in the capital, Addis Ababa, and they worked in six public referral hospitals and one private center.
Over 12 months (2017-2018) 508 children underwent surgery; 84 (17%) children had bilateral and 424 (83%) had unilateral cataract, mainly following trauma (mean 66 (range 18-145 standard deviation (SD) ±47) eyes/surgeon). There were substantially fewer surgeons per million population (nine for 115 million population) than recommended by the World Health Organization and they were unevenly distributed across the country.
Methylcellulose and rigid intraocular lenses were generally available but less than 50% of facilities had a sharp vitrectomy cutter and cohesive viscoelastic. Mean travel time outside Addis Ababa to a facility offering pediatric cataract surgery was 10 hours.
Conclusion: Despite the high number of cases per surgeon, the output for bilateral cataracts was far lower than required. More well-equipped ophthalmologists trained in pediatric cataract surgery are urgently required, with deployment to under-served areas.