Survey of the attitudes of nigerian ophthalmologists to and resources for ophthalmic research

To study the views of ophthalmologists on their attitude to and the resources for ophthalmic health research in Nigeria and draw appropriate policy implications. Structured questionnaires were distributed to 120 ophthalmologists and ophthalmic residents who were attending an annual congress in Niger...

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Veröffentlicht in:Middle East African journal of ophthalmology 2012-01, Vol.19 (1), p.123-128
Hauptverfasser: Mahmoud, Abdulraheem O, Ayanniyi, Abdulkabir A, Lawal, Abdu, Omolase, Charles O, Ologunsua, Yinka, Samaila, Elsie
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container_end_page 128
container_issue 1
container_start_page 123
container_title Middle East African journal of ophthalmology
container_volume 19
creator Mahmoud, Abdulraheem O
Ayanniyi, Abdulkabir A
Lawal, Abdu
Omolase, Charles O
Ologunsua, Yinka
Samaila, Elsie
description To study the views of ophthalmologists on their attitude to and the resources for ophthalmic health research in Nigeria and draw appropriate policy implications. Structured questionnaires were distributed to 120 ophthalmologists and ophthalmic residents who were attending an annual congress in Nigeria. Data were collected on background information, importance attributed to research, motivation for conducting research, funding, ethical oversight, literature search, and statistical support. The coded responses were statistically analyzed. P < 0.05 was statistically significant. Eighty-nine of the 120 questionnaires were returned giving a response rate of 74.2%. Research function was rated a distant last by 49.5% of the respondents after clinical service (93.2%), teaching (63.1%), and community service (62.8%). Advancement of knowledge was the strongest motivating factor for conducting research (78.2 %). Securing funding (91.8%) and finding time (78.8%) were the major constraints. The ethical review committees were considered suboptimal by the respondents. Literature searches for research were conducted on the internet (79.3%) and was independent of age (P = 0.465). Research data were stored and analyzed on commonly available statistical software. Although study respondents regarded research highly, they were severely constrained in conducting research due to lack of access to funds and finding time away from the clinical workload. We recommend periodic (re)training on conducting good research including preparation of successful applications for research grants and allotting protected research time for ophthalmologists in Nigeria.
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source Medknow Open Access Medical Journals; PubMed Central Open Access; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; PubMed Central
subjects Attitude (Psychology)
Biomedical research
Committees
Confidence intervals
Ethics
Eye diseases
Health facilities
Internet resources
Medical research
Medicine, Experimental
Ophthalmologists
Original
Questionnaires
Studies
Surveys
Teaching hospitals
title Survey of the attitudes of nigerian ophthalmologists to and resources for ophthalmic research
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