PLoS ONE (Jan 2020)

The use of telemedicine to support Brazilian primary care physicians in managing eye conditions: The TeleOftalmo Project.

  • Aline Lutz de Araujo,
  • Taís de Campos Moreira,
  • Dimitris Rucks Varvaki Rados,
  • Paula Blasco Gross,
  • Cynthia Goulart Molina-Bastos,
  • Natan Katz,
  • Lisiane Hauser,
  • Rodolfo Souza da Silva,
  • Sabrina Dalbosco Gadenz,
  • Rafael Gustavo Dal Moro,
  • Felipe Cezar Cabral,
  • Lucas Matturro,
  • Cássia Garcia Moraes Pagano,
  • Amanda Gomes Faria,
  • Maicon Falavigna,
  • Ana Célia da Silva Siqueira,
  • Paulo Schor,
  • Marcelo Rodrigues Gonçalves,
  • Roberto Nunes Umpierre,
  • Erno Harzheim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0231034
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 4
p. e0231034

Abstract

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PurposeTo determine whether teleophthalmology can help physicians in assessing and managing eye conditions and to ascertain which clinical conditions can be addressed by teleophthalmology in primary care setting.MethodsWe evaluated the resolution capacity of TeleOftalmo, strategy implemented in the public health system of southern Brazil. Resolution capacity was defined as the ability to fully address patients' eye complaints in primary care with remote assistance from ophthalmologists. Data from tele-eye reports were collected over 14 months. Resolution capacity was compared across different age groups and different ocular conditions.ResultsOverall, 8,142 patients had a tele-eye report issued in the study period. Resolution capacity was achieved in 5,748 (70.6%) patients. When stratified into age groups, the lowest capacity was 43.1% among subjects aged ≥65 years, while the highest was 89.7% among subjects aged 13-17 years (pConclusionsWith telemedicine support, primary care physicians solved over two-thirds of patients' eye or vision complaints. Refractive errors had high case resolution rates, thus having a great impact on reducing the number of referrals to specialty care. Teleophthalmology adoption in primary-care settings as part of the workup of patients with eye or vision complaints promotes a more effective use of specialty centers and will hopefully reduce waiting times for specialty referral.