Ly Angelica, Nivison-Smith Lisa, Hennessy Michael P, Kalloniatis Michael
Centre for Eye Health, Sydney, Australia.
School of Optometry and Vision Science, UNSW Australia, Sydney, Australia.
Ophthalmic Physiol Opt. 2016 Nov;36(6):632-642. doi: 10.1111/opo.12322.
Diseases involving the macula and posterior pole are leading causes of visual impairment and blindness worldwide and may require prompt ophthalmological care. However, access to eye-care and timely patient management may be limited due to inefficient and inappropriate referrals between primary eye-care providers and ophthalmology. Optometrists with a special interest in macular disease may be useful as a community aid to better stratify and recommend best-practice management plans for suitable patients. This study assesses such a notion by appraising the optometric referral patterns of patients with suspected macular disease to an intermediate-tier optometric imaging clinic.
We performed a retrospective review of patient records and referrals using patients examined at Centre for Eye Health (CFEH) for an initial or follow up macular assessment between the 1/7/2013 and 30/6/2014 (n = 291). The following data were analysed: patient demographic characteristics, primary reason for referral, diagnosed/suspected condition, CFEH diagnosis and recommended management plan.
The number of referrals stipulating a diagnosis, confirmed after evaluation at CFEH was 121 of 291 (42%). After evaluation at CFEH, the number of cases without a specific diagnosis was approximately halved (reduced from 47% to 23%), while the number of cases with no apparent defect or normal aging changes rose from 1% to 15%. Overall diagnostic congruency for specified macular conditions was high (58-94%); cases were seldom (30/291, 10%) found to have a completely different macular condition. 244 of 291 (84%) patients seen at CFEH were recommended ongoing optometric care: either with the referring optometrist or through recall to CFEH. Referral to an ophthalmologist was recommended in 47 instances (16%).
More widespread adoption of intermediate-tier optometric eye-care referral pathways in macular disease (following opportunistic primary care screening) has the potential to reduce the number of cases with non-specific diagnoses and to increase those with a diagnosis of normal aging changes or no apparent disease. The majority of cases seen under this intermediate-tier model required ongoing optometric care only and did not require face-to-face consultation with an ophthalmologist.
累及黄斑和后极部的疾病是全球视力损害和失明的主要原因,可能需要及时的眼科护理。然而,由于初级眼科护理提供者与眼科之间的转诊效率低下和不恰当,获得眼保健服务和及时的患者管理可能会受到限制。对黄斑疾病有特殊兴趣的验光师可能有助于社区更好地对合适的患者进行分层,并推荐最佳实践管理计划。本研究通过评估疑似黄斑疾病患者向中级验光成像诊所的验光转诊模式来评估这一概念。
我们对在眼健康中心(CFEH)于2013年7月1日至2014年6月30日期间接受初次或随访黄斑评估的患者(n = 291)的病历和转诊情况进行了回顾性研究。分析了以下数据:患者人口统计学特征、转诊的主要原因、已诊断/疑似病情、CFEH诊断和推荐的管理计划。
在CFEH评估后确诊的转诊病例数为291例中的121例(42%)。在CFEH评估后,无特定诊断的病例数大约减半(从47%降至23%),而无明显缺陷或正常年龄相关变化的病例数从1%升至15%。特定黄斑疾病的总体诊断一致性较高(58 - 94%);很少有病例(30/291,10%)被发现患有完全不同的黄斑疾病。在CFEH就诊的291例患者中有244例(84%)被推荐继续接受验光护理:要么由转诊的验光师进行,要么通过召回至CFEH。有47例(16%)被推荐转诊至眼科医生处。
在黄斑疾病中(在机会性初级保健筛查之后)更广泛地采用中级验光眼保健转诊途径有可能减少非特定诊断的病例数,并增加诊断为正常年龄相关变化或无明显疾病的病例数。在这种中级模式下就诊的大多数病例仅需要持续的验光护理,而不需要与眼科医生进行面对面咨询。