Optometry Outreach in Indigenous Communities in British Columbia, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba

Introduction: Inuit, Métis, and First Nations, the three main Indigenous groups within Canada, face disproportionate barriers to access for primary eye and vision care. Optometrists visit rural and remote Indigenous communities to provide outreach care to areas without a local optometrist; however,...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Warren, Adrianna
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Waterloo 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10012/19815
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author Warren, Adrianna
author_facet Warren, Adrianna
author_sort Warren, Adrianna
collection University of Waterloo, Canada: Institutional Repository
description Introduction: Inuit, Métis, and First Nations, the three main Indigenous groups within Canada, face disproportionate barriers to access for primary eye and vision care. Optometrists visit rural and remote Indigenous communities to provide outreach care to areas without a local optometrist; however, the approach is fragmented and not well represented. The purpose of this project is to assess the current state of outreach optometry within Indigenous communities by surveying optometrists who provide outreach care. Methods: In collaboration with the provincial optometry regulatory bodies, eligible participants were identified as optometrists who travel outside of their primary clinics to provide care within non-urban Indigenous communities. A questionnaire was developed through iterative stakeholder review for phase I of the study. The online questionnaire captured the delivery of care across one year (2022). The process of planning logistics, distances travelled, patient care provided and associated expenses were queried. A Semi-structured interview guide was developed for phase II of the study. One-on-one interviews expanded on questionnaire themes, providing insight into individual experiences. Data was collated through descriptive statistics and thematic coding for case and cross-case analysis. Results: The overall response rate was 50% (18/36) for the questionnaire and 30.5% (11/36) for the interview. Total questionnaire responses represent 96 outreach visits, 312.5 optometry clinic days, and 8,386 patient encounters across 64 communities in the three provinces. Optometrists coordinate with health center employees and school contacts to plan outreach visits, travelling primarily north to some of the most remote areas within each province. Overall Euclidean distances between participants primary clinic locations and communities visited ranged from 65 to 1405 kilometers (kms) (median: 438 kms). Costs per clinic day were highly variable ($174.44 - $3,800, mean: $765 per clinic day). Challenges reported were ...
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spelling ftunivwaterloo:oai:uwspace.uwaterloo.ca:10012/19815 2025-01-16T21:57:02+00:00 Optometry Outreach in Indigenous Communities in British Columbia, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba Warren, Adrianna 2023-08-30 http://hdl.handle.net/10012/19815 en eng University of Waterloo http://hdl.handle.net/10012/19815 access optometry outreach Indigenous eye care community optometry vision science health service delivery Master Thesis 2023 ftunivwaterloo 2023-09-02T22:58:37Z Introduction: Inuit, Métis, and First Nations, the three main Indigenous groups within Canada, face disproportionate barriers to access for primary eye and vision care. Optometrists visit rural and remote Indigenous communities to provide outreach care to areas without a local optometrist; however, the approach is fragmented and not well represented. The purpose of this project is to assess the current state of outreach optometry within Indigenous communities by surveying optometrists who provide outreach care. Methods: In collaboration with the provincial optometry regulatory bodies, eligible participants were identified as optometrists who travel outside of their primary clinics to provide care within non-urban Indigenous communities. A questionnaire was developed through iterative stakeholder review for phase I of the study. The online questionnaire captured the delivery of care across one year (2022). The process of planning logistics, distances travelled, patient care provided and associated expenses were queried. A Semi-structured interview guide was developed for phase II of the study. One-on-one interviews expanded on questionnaire themes, providing insight into individual experiences. Data was collated through descriptive statistics and thematic coding for case and cross-case analysis. Results: The overall response rate was 50% (18/36) for the questionnaire and 30.5% (11/36) for the interview. Total questionnaire responses represent 96 outreach visits, 312.5 optometry clinic days, and 8,386 patient encounters across 64 communities in the three provinces. Optometrists coordinate with health center employees and school contacts to plan outreach visits, travelling primarily north to some of the most remote areas within each province. Overall Euclidean distances between participants primary clinic locations and communities visited ranged from 65 to 1405 kilometers (kms) (median: 438 kms). Costs per clinic day were highly variable ($174.44 - $3,800, mean: $765 per clinic day). Challenges reported were ... Master Thesis First Nations inuit University of Waterloo, Canada: Institutional Repository Canada British Columbia ENVELOPE(-125.003,-125.003,54.000,54.000)
spellingShingle access
optometry outreach
Indigenous eye care
community optometry
vision science
health service delivery
Warren, Adrianna
Optometry Outreach in Indigenous Communities in British Columbia, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba
title Optometry Outreach in Indigenous Communities in British Columbia, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba
title_full Optometry Outreach in Indigenous Communities in British Columbia, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba
title_fullStr Optometry Outreach in Indigenous Communities in British Columbia, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba
title_full_unstemmed Optometry Outreach in Indigenous Communities in British Columbia, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba
title_short Optometry Outreach in Indigenous Communities in British Columbia, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba
title_sort optometry outreach in indigenous communities in british columbia, saskatchewan, and manitoba
topic access
optometry outreach
Indigenous eye care
community optometry
vision science
health service delivery
topic_facet access
optometry outreach
Indigenous eye care
community optometry
vision science
health service delivery
url http://hdl.handle.net/10012/19815