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Reliability of telemedicine for real-time paediatric ophthalmology consultations
by
Stewart, Carly
, Lee, Thomas C
, Nallasamy, Sudha
, Coffey-Sandoval, Josephine
, Reid, Mark W
, Ho, Tiffany C
in
Agreements
/ angle
/ Blindness
/ child health (paediatrics)
/ Clinical outcomes
/ Clinical Science
/ Guardians
/ Health care access
/ Hospitals
/ Ophthalmology
/ Patient satisfaction
/ Pediatrics
/ Strabismus
/ Telemedicine
/ Visual impairment
2022
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Reliability of telemedicine for real-time paediatric ophthalmology consultations
by
Stewart, Carly
, Lee, Thomas C
, Nallasamy, Sudha
, Coffey-Sandoval, Josephine
, Reid, Mark W
, Ho, Tiffany C
in
Agreements
/ angle
/ Blindness
/ child health (paediatrics)
/ Clinical outcomes
/ Clinical Science
/ Guardians
/ Health care access
/ Hospitals
/ Ophthalmology
/ Patient satisfaction
/ Pediatrics
/ Strabismus
/ Telemedicine
/ Visual impairment
2022
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Do you wish to request the book?
Reliability of telemedicine for real-time paediatric ophthalmology consultations
by
Stewart, Carly
, Lee, Thomas C
, Nallasamy, Sudha
, Coffey-Sandoval, Josephine
, Reid, Mark W
, Ho, Tiffany C
in
Agreements
/ angle
/ Blindness
/ child health (paediatrics)
/ Clinical outcomes
/ Clinical Science
/ Guardians
/ Health care access
/ Hospitals
/ Ophthalmology
/ Patient satisfaction
/ Pediatrics
/ Strabismus
/ Telemedicine
/ Visual impairment
2022
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Reliability of telemedicine for real-time paediatric ophthalmology consultations
Journal Article
Reliability of telemedicine for real-time paediatric ophthalmology consultations
2022
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Overview
Background/aimsTo assess the accuracy of real-time telemedicine to diagnose and manage paediatric eye conditions.Methods Design: Prospective, non-inferiority study analysing agreement in diagnoses and management plans between telemedicine and in-person examinations. Setting: Paediatric ophthalmology clinic. Population: Children 0–17 years, English-speaking or Spanish-speaking, able to participate in age-appropriate manner, either previously seen by the optometrist and required ophthalmology referral or newly referred from outside source. Procedures: Paediatric optometrist conducted examinations using digital equipment and streamed live to a paediatric ophthalmologist who recorded diagnoses and management plans, then re-examined patients in-person. Subjects were masked to the fact they would see the ophthalmologist in-person, same-day. Main outcome measures: Discrepancy in management plan or diagnosis between telemedicine and in-person examinations. Non-inferiority threshold was <1.5% for management plan or <15% for diagnosis discrepancies.Results210 patients participated in 348 examinations. 131 (62.4%) had strabismus as primary diagnosis. In these patients, excellent and almost perfect agreement was observed for angle measurements (intraclass correlation coefficients=0.98–1.00) and disease categorisation (kappa=0.94–1.00) (p<0.0001 in all cases). No primary diagnoses changed, and no management plans changed following in-person examination. 54/55 patients who consented for surgery at the initial visit did so while masked to receiving an in-person examination. Families felt comfortable with the quality of the telemedicine examination (98.5%) and would participate in another in the future (97.1%).ConclusionPaediatric ophthalmic conditions can be reliably diagnosed and managed via telemedicine. Access for underserved populations may be improved by collaboration between ophthalmologists and optometrists using this technology.
Publisher
BMJ Publishing Group Ltd,BMJ Publishing Group LTD,BMJ Publishing Group
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