Strengthening retinopathy of prematurity screening and treatment services in Nigeria: a case study of activities, challenges and outcomes 2017-2020.
Dupe S Ademola-PopoolaIretiola B FajoluClare GilbertBolutife A OlusanyaOluwatoyin H OnakpoyaChinyelu N EzisiKareem O MusaRobison Vernon Paul ChanValentina W OkeigbemenRilwan C MuhammadAeesha N J MalikAdedayo O AdioOlubunmi T BodundeAbdulkadir L RafindadiTunji S OluleyeOlukemi O TongoSarat A BadmusOlufunmilayo V AdebaraTapas Ranjan PadhiBeatrice N EzenwaTokunbo S ObajolowoLateefat B OlokobaVictoria A OlatunjiYewande Olubunmi BabalolaMary O UgalahiAdetunji AdenekanOmotayo O AdesiyunJagdish SahooMarilyn T MillerOdarosa M UhumwanghoAdeduntan S OlagbenroEbunoluwa A AdejuyigbeChinyere V C EzeakaOlugbenga MokuoluTinuade A OgunlesiOlusoga B OgunfoworaIsa AbdulkadirFatima L AbdullahiAbosede T FabiyiLaila H L HassanAderonke M BaiyerojuPeace I OparaKehinde OladigboluAugusta U EnehBassey E FiebaiFatima A Mahmud-AjeigbeElijah N PeterHawwa S AbdullahiPublished in: BMJ open ophthalmology (2021)
ROP screening coverage and quality improved after national and international collaborative efforts. To scale up and improve services, equipment for neonatal care and ROP treatment is urgently needed, as well as systems to monitor data. Ongoing advocacy is also essential.