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Australian Health Review Australian Health Review Society
Journal of the Australian Healthcare & Hospitals Association
RESEARCH ARTICLE (Open Access)

Lessons learned from a subsidised spectacles scheme aiming to improve eye health in Aboriginal people in Victoria, Australia

Timothy R. Fricke A , Chelsea Brand B , Levi Lovett C , Neville W. Turner D , Mitchell D. Anjou E and Sharon A. Bentley D F G
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Brien Holden Vision Institute, 2/73 Hartley St, Alice Springs, NT, 0870, Australia. Email: t.fricke@bhvi.org

B Department of Health and Human Services, Victorian Government, 50 Lonsdale St, Melbourne, Vic. 3000, Australia. Email: Chelsea.Brand@dhhs.vic.gov.au

C Victorian Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation, 17–23 Sackville St, Collingwood, Vic. 3066, Australia. Email: levi.76@live.com.au

D Australian College of Optometry, National Vision Research Institute, 374 Cardigan St, Carlton, Vic. 3053, Australia. Email: nturner@aco.org.au

E Indigenous Eye Health, Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, The University of Melbourne, Level 5, 207 Bouverie St, Carlton, Vic. 3010, Australia. Email: manjou@unimelb.edu.au

F School of Optometry and Vision Science, Queensland University of Technology, Victoria Park Rd, Kelvin Grove, Qld 4059, Australia.

G Corresponding author. Email: sharon.bentley@qut.edu.au

Australian Health Review 45(2) 194-198 https://doi.org/10.1071/AH20023
Submitted: 9 February 2020  Accepted: 19 June 2020   Published: 10 November 2020

Journal Compilation © AHHA 2021 Open Access CC BY-NC-ND

Abstract

The Victorian Aboriginal Spectacles Subsidy Scheme (VASSS) aimed to improve access to visual aids and eye care for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Victorians. The VASSS started in July 2010 and has operated continually since. In 2016, we explored the collaborations, planning, adaptations and performance of the VASSS over the first 6 years by reviewing and analysing service data, as well as data from semistructured interviews, focus groups and surveys. An estimated 10 853 VASSS cofunded visual aids were delivered over 6 years, and the mean annual number of comprehensive eye examinations provided within services using VASSS grew 4.6-fold faster compared with the 4 years preceding the VASSS. We estimate that 16% and 19% of recipients presented with distance and near vision impairments respectively, all of which were corrected with visual aids. VASSS achievements were attained through collaborations, flexibility, trust and communication between organisations, all facilitated by funding resulting from evidence-based advocacy. Access to visual aids and eye examinations by Aboriginal Victorians has improved during the operation of the VASSS, with associated direct and indirect benefits to Aboriginal health, productivity and quality of life. The success of the VASSS may be replicable in other jurisdictions and provides lessons that may be applicable in other fields.

What is known about the topic? The 2009 National Indigenous Eye Health Survey estimated that the age-adjusted prevalence of vision impairment was 2.8-fold higher and the prevalence of blindness 6.2-fold higher among adult Aboriginal Australians compared with non-Aboriginal Australians, predominantly due to uncorrected refractive error and cataract.

What does this paper add? Implemented in 2010, the Victorian Aboriginal Spectacles Subsidy Scheme (VASSS) has been supported, designed and well received by stakeholders and, critically, the Aboriginal community. The VASSS has successfully improved access to comprehensive eye examinations and high-quality affordable visual aids (principally spectacles, with cost certainty).

What are the implications for practitioners? The VASSS demonstrates the power of collaborative partnerships and the potential for solutions targeted at specific components of a system to generate wider benefits, including the reduction of the prevalence and burden of vision impairment by correcting refractive error, managing vision-threatening eye disease and increasing awareness of eye health issues.

Keywords: Aboriginal health, eye care, refractive error, vision, vision impairment.


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