KUMJ | VOL. 20 | NO. 1 | ISSUE 77 | JANUARY - MARCH, 2022
Awareness and Knowledge of Glaucoma and their Associated Factors among People Visiting a Tertiary Level Hospital in Central Nepal
Shrestha A, Shrestha P, Shrestha T, Shrestha RM, Sujakhu D, Dhakal K, Thapa G, Adhikari S, Karki S, Adhikari B
Abstract: Background
Glaucoma is one of the major causes of irreversible blindness globally. Almost 60
million people globally are affected by glaucoma making it the second leading cause
of blindness worldwide. Diagnosis of glaucoma early on is vital for timely management
and prevention of blindness. However, it is challenging to diagnose it early because
it is asymptomatic in the initial stage, and there is also the dearth of appropriate
screening tools. Awareness, knowledge, and beliefs are believed to influence the
treatment-seeking behavior of people as well as their uptake of services.
Objective
To assess the awareness and knowledge about glaucoma among general patients
and patient attendants visiting Dhulikhel Hospital.
Method
We conducted a cross sectional quantitative study among general patients visiting
Dhulikhel Hospital. We collected data using face-to-face interviews with semistructured
questionnaires. We analyzed data in R version 4.0.3 (2020-10-10). We
presented numerical variables as mean and standard deviation whereas categorical
variables as frequency and percentage. We determined factors associated with
awareness and knowledge of glaucoma using logistic regression analysis and
estimated adjusted odds ratio (AOR) with 95% confidence interval.
Result
Of 379 participants, a total of 214 (56.5%) participants had heard about glaucoma.
Out of the participants who heard about glaucoma, the mean knowledge score was
48.3±21.7 and 53.3% had good knowledge on glaucoma. The odds of having heard
about glaucoma were two percent lower (AOR=0.98; 95%CI: 0.97-0.99; p-value
0.036) in the older participants compared to one year younger participant, 1.98
(95%CI:1.01-3.86; p-value 0.046) times higher among literates and 2.79 (95%CI: 1.76-
4.41; p-value < 0.001) times among participants with previous ocular examination.
The odds of having good knowledge was 1.94 (95%CI: 1.10-3.42; p value 0.021) times
among participants with previous ocular examinations.
Conclusion
The knowledge and awareness regarding glaucoma in a hospital-visiting population in
central Nepal was low. Half of the participants were unaware of the disease glaucoma
and half of the participants who heard of the glaucoma had poor knowledge on
glaucoma.
Keyword : Awareness, Glaucoma, Knowledge