PO Box 4066 Alice Springs NT 0871
P: +61 8 8951 4700
General Enquiries: remotephcmanuals@flinders.edu.au
Viral conjunctivitis — highly contagious. Tends to involve other eye within 24–48 hours
Bacterial conjunctivitis — usually one sided but can sometimes spread to other eye
Allergic conjunctivitis — usually in both eyes
AND azithromycin oral — adult 1g, child 20mg/kg (max dose 1g), single dose
Can be life-threatening — medical consult to send to hospital urgently
AND flucloxacillin IV — adult 2g, child 50mg/kg/dose up to 2g — doses — single dose
Sight threatening emergency caused by increased pressure inside eye — urgent medical/specialist consult to send to hospital
Potentially blinding eye disease caused by corneal scarring by trichiasis (misdirected eye lashes) after repeated conjunctival infections, which may have occurred in childhood. Often has few or no symptoms
Trachoma control needs
©Trachoma photos from WHO simplified grading card https://www.who.int/teams/control-of-neglected-tropical-diseases/trachoma/diagnosis August 2022. Reproduced with permission
PO Box 4066 Alice Springs NT 0871
P: +61 8 8951 4700
General Enquiries: remotephcmanuals@flinders.edu.au