VISION 2020 Workshop report - Indonesia
Transcription
VISION 2020 Workshop report - Indonesia
Report of Vision 2020 IAPB Workshop Indonesia 0 Report of Vision 2020 IAPB Workshop Indonesia Contents Pages Acknowledgement 2 Executive Summary 3 Programme Schedule 4 Workshop Flow 5 Conclusions and recommendations 8 Appendix 9 Budget allocation 11 Participants List 12 Photos 13 1 ACKNOWLEDGEMENT We place on record the contributions from London School Hygiene & Tropical Medicine for supporting this venture and making it successful. This workshop has been made productive by the valuable contribution by the participants who shared their experiences and views on various topics related to the review and development of actionable national plans. We express our sincere gratitude to: Dr. Nina Ratnaningsih, SpM, MSc (Indonesia Ophthalmologist Association) Abu Raihan, MD, MPH(IAPB Co-chair Bangladesh) Dr. Johan Hutauruk, SpM (Indonesia Ophthalmologist Association) Dr. Rastri Paramita, SpM (RSM dr. YAP, Jogjakarta) Dr. Mayang Rini, SpM, MSc, CEH (Cicendo Eye Hospital) Dr. J. Prastowo Nugroho, MHA (BKMM Cikampek, West Java) Dr. dr. H. Noor Syamsu, SpM(K), MARS, MKes (BKMM Makasar, South Sulawesi) Dr. Dyana Watania, SpM (BKMM Manado, North Sulawesi) Dr. Dyah Wiryastini, MARS (BKMM Surabaya, East Java) Dr. Siti Farida I. T. Santyowibowo, SpM(K) (BKMM Mataram, West Nusa Tenggara) Mr. Matthew Hanning (CBM ) Mr. Iskandar Atmodjo (FRED HOLLOW) Mr. Prateek Gupta (Helen Keller International) DR. Dr. Andhika Prahasta, SpM(K), MKes (Indonesia Ophthalmologist Association, Glaucoma) DR. Dr. Iwan Sovani, SpM(K), MKes, MM (Indonesia Ophthalmologist Association, Retina) Dr. Setiyo Budi Riyanto, SpM(K) (Indonesia Ophthalmologist Association, Cataract) Dr. Yeni Dwi Lestari, SpM, MSc (Indonesia Ophthalmologist Association) Dr. Syumarti, SpM(K), MSc, CEH (Indonesia Ophthalmologist Association) The success of the workshop lay in the insightful reflections and the quality discussions perpetrated by the involvement of the participants. We thank all the participants from various Eye Health Institution for their active contribution. 2 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY A world in which no one is needlessly blind and where those with unavoidable vision loss can achieve their full potential,- VISION 2020 Gift of sight is God’s precious gift to the mankind. Realizing the importance of eyes and their functions is necessary. Today we see eye disorders more common. Every five seconds one person in the world goes blind. It is estimated by WHO that over seven million people become blind every year. By now it is estimated that 180 million people worldwide are visually disabled, of those, between 40-45 million are blind and one third of them are in South East Asia. Due to growing populations and ageing, these numbers are expected to double by the year 2020. While actually eighty percent of all cases of blindness can be treated even prevented, and by that the right to sight can and must be fulfilled. Blindness due to untreated cataract in Indonesia is pointed at 0.78% of population, and in the National Survey 2014 was reported that cataract prevalence as 1.8%. Highest in South East Asia and highest compared to glaucoma, corneal disease and other posterior segment diseases. It affects the quality of life and socio-economic status of patients and economy of a nation at micro level. The preventable blindness affects the economic contribution of citizens in the age group of 50-65 years and the output of working class due to the economic and social dependence of senior people in family. And due to climate in Indonesia, the people is tend to bear cataract 15 years earlier than people in sub tropical climate. The advancement in the competencies and surgical techniques brings a ray of hope for impossible cases assuring that the right to sight for all can be achieved and then again, must be fulfilled. We are now working toward achieving VISION 2020 which aims to improve eye health for everyone, the global initiative for elimination of avoidable blindness jointly launched by World Health Organization (WHO) and International Agency for Prevention of Blindness (IAPB), in Geneva in the year 1999. 3 Partners including Government, NGOs, professional associations, eye care institutions and corporations, each committed to the elimination of avoidable blindness by the year 2020. With three indicators of Global Action Plan which are the prevalence/ causes of visual impairment, the number of eye personne,l and cataract surgical rate/ coverage, the eye care efforts of all providers were largely aligned towards these plans of preserving and restoring vision. The developments presented by the participants must be an outcome of lot of research and knowledge understanding. Hope this workshop would be instrumental in development of novel methods in vision restoration and management of chronic eye complications. PROGRAMME SCHEDULE Objectives of the workshop: This workshop is aimed to come up with the document which reflects the existing eye service situation of the country, identified the gap and suggested measures to fulfil the gap to achieve the goal of vision 2020 the right to sight in Indonesia. It is expected that the document will be helpful to show the national scenario of eye care service and suggested methods can be transformed to provincial and district level of eye care services. Activity: 1. Paper presentations from each eye care program/ hospital/province on existing situation on human resource, service outputs, infrastructure and quality assurance of services 2. Guidelines from resource persons 3. Group work to identify the gap and suggest appropriate measures 4. Final draft preparation of workshop proceedings 4 WORKSHOP FLOW The workshop was opened by President of Perdami and Co-Chair IAPB SEA Indonesia, and the workshop flow was smooth and doing well. Discussion done at the end of the meeting, and chaired by Co-chair IAPB SEA Bangladesh Abu Raihan, M.D. Each Eye Health Institution plan and its targets were reviewed against the actual need in their respective service area. The targets for resource mobilisation and performance were reviewed to reflect the required service levels to meet the goals of Vision 2020 to ensure eye care coverage in the community. The participants from each Eye Health Institution presented the challenges and barriers they faced in implementing a coordinated eye care programme that was aligned to the goals of Vision 2020. The plans were then also reviewed to incorporate measures that would overcome these identified implementation issues: - Issues related to human resources – Sufficiency and capability of the existing eye care workforce - Issues related to access – awareness, affordability and accessibility of eye care to all - Issues related to structure – a structure that enables effective execution of the national programme. The participants’ experiences with these issues as well as the cross-learning among the Eye Health Institution present helped to elicit new approaches as well as ensure the review of the plans in a way that would ensure effective execution. 5 Current Eye Care Status and Major Challenges Current Eye Status in Indonesia In Indonesia : 3 million blind people ( 1.5% of the population ) Every minute one person goes blind Highest in Southeast Asia The incidence of blindness each year is 0.1% ( 210,000 people ) Most are in the area of low economic The ability of 80,000 cataract surgery each year/ CSR Backlog (buildup) 130,000 each year Indonesian population suffering cataract 15 years earliar than the population of developed country 6 Main cause of blindness in Indonesia • Cataract • Glaucoma • Refractive disorders • Retinal disorders • Corneal abnormalities 0.78% 0.20% 0.14% 0.13% 0.10% Cataract Surgical Rate And Coverage Major Challenges of Eye Care in Indonesia 1. Lack of government schemes to support provision of eye care 2. Lack of ophthalmologist and concentration of service in and around the capital and the major cities 3. Insufficient coverage of the population for specialty eye care services 4. Inaccuracy of existing data of blindness development in Indonesia in present time. 7 CONCLUSION 1. An accurate national data serves as data baseline is urgently needed in order to achieve Global Action Plan 2014 – 2019. The data from the RAAB ongoing research is intentionally will meet the purpose. Thus, the RAAB research needs to be done in several provinces in Indonesia to become a proper data to represent a national data. 2. There has to be a National Coordinator who will act as an initiator, collector and regulator of blindness prevention activity in Indonesia. 3. The blindness prevention activity will take a serious commitment measured by adequate policy and finance from the government to support it as integrated into universal health coverage and universal health system. RECOMMENDATION Encourage the government to provide more support for comprehensive eye care Improvement of eye care components such as human resource, infrastructure, quality assurance and partnership in order to provide integrated, comprehensive and sufficient coverage of eye health service at all levels. Encourage the effort to provide acurate present data of blindness in Indonesia in order to determine precise strategy to accomplish Vision 2020. Planning next meeting to evaluate development and determine next step. 8 APPENDIX 9 Participant List 1. Abu Raihan, MD IAPB 2. dr. Nina Ratnaningsih 3. Prof. Farida Sirlan 4. dr. Iwan Sovani CICENDO 5. dr. Andika P. CICENDO 6. dr. Setiyobudi Riyanto 7. IAPB/ CICENDO abu.raihan@orbis.org nratnanina@gmail.com andikapg2000@yahoo.com KBR PERDAMI/ JEC setiyobudi@gmail.com dr. Erin Arsianti RSM DR. YAP e_arsianti@yahoo.com 8. dr.Mayang Rini CICENDO 9. dr. J. Prastowo BKMM JABAR prasnug2002@yahoo.com 10. dr. Noor Syamsu BKMM SULSEL 11. Dr. Dyana Watania BKMM SULUT dyanatheresia@yahoo.com 12. Dr. Dyah W. BKMM JATIM dyahwiryastini@yahoo.co.id 13. Dr. Siti Farida BKMM NTB 14. Mr. Matthew Hanning CBM 15. Mr. Maksum CBM 16. Mr. Prateek Gupta HKI 17. Dr. Syumarti 18. Dr. Yeni Dwi Lestari 19. Mr. Iskandar Atmodjo 20. Dr. Djamaludin 21. Mr. Bambang Setiohadji 22. Dr. Eko Hadi Waluyojati 23. Dr. I Gusti Ayu Made Juliari mhanning@cbmindonesia.org CICENDO/ IAPB CICENDO FRED HOLLOW RSMM SURABAYA yeni2lestari@yahoo.com iatmodjo@hollows.org dr.jamaluddin@ymail.com CICENDO bsetiohadji@gmail.com KLINIK MATA ekohadiw@gmail.com MAYESTIK RS SANGLAH DPS arie_mata@yahoo.com 24. Dr. Herti Rachmawati BKIM JATENG bkimjtg@yahoo.com 25. Dr. Ninuk Sumaryati BKIM JATENG bkimjateng@gmail.com 26. Dr. Parmono BKMM SAMARINDA parmonodharma@yahoo.co.id 27. Dr. Dianawati Kusumowardani RSMM JAWA TIMUR dianawati_k@yahoo.com 28. Mrs. Dina Herawati Djohansyah RSMM JATIM 29. Dr. Miranda Johannes 30. Dr. Yuningwati 31. Dr. Sriana Wulansari dina.djohansjah@yahoo.com RSUD BA’A NTT mirandatherikj@gmail.com RSMM SURABAYA dr_yuningwati@yahoo.co.id BKMM NTB sariw39@yahoo.com 10 Group and Meeting Photographs 11