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      Impact of optical coherence tomography on diagnostic decision‐making by UK community optometrists: a clinical vignette study

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          Abstract

          Purpose

          In recent years, there has been widespread investment in imaging technologies by community optometrists in the UK, most notably optical coherence tomography ( OCT). The aim of the current study was to determine the value of OCT in the diagnosis of posterior segment diseases in a representative sample of community optometrists using a clinical vignette methodology.

          Methods

          A group of community optometrists ( n = 50) initially completed a standardised training package on OCT interpretation followed by a computer‐based assessment featuring 52 clinical vignettes, containing images of healthy ( n = 8) or glaucomatous ( n = 18) discs or healthy ( n = 8) or diseased ( n = 18) fundi. Each vignette featured either a single fundus/disc photographic image, or a combination of a fundus/disc image with the corresponding OCT scan. An expert panel confirmed that the fundus images presented alone and those in combination with OCT data were of a similar level of difficulty and that the cases were typical of those seen in primary care. For each case, the optometrist selected their diagnosis from a pull‐down list and reported their confidence in their decision using a 10‐point Likert scale. Pairwise comparisons of the fundus image alone and fundus image/ OCT combination were made for both diagnostic performance and confidence.

          Results

          The mean percentage of correct diagnoses using fundus imaging alone was 62% (95% CI 59–64%) and for the combination of fundus image/ OCT was 80% (95% CI 77–82%). The mean false negative rate with fundus alone was 27% reducing to 13% with the OCT combination. Median confidence scores for fundus imaging alone was 8.0 ( IQR 7.0–8.0) and 8.3 ( IQR 8.0–9.0) for the combination. Improvements in performance and confidence were statistically significant ( p < 0.001).

          Conclusion

          The results from this vignette study suggests that OCT improves optometrists’ diagnostic performance compared to fundus observation alone. These initial results suggest that OCT provides valuable additional data that could augment case‐finding for glaucoma and retinal disease; however, further research is needed to assess its diagnostic performance in a routine clinical practice setting.

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          Most cited references30

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          Comparison of vignettes, standardized patients, and chart abstraction: a prospective validation study of 3 methods for measuring quality.

          Better health care quality is a universal goal, yet measuring quality has proven to be difficult and problematic. A central problem has been isolating physician practices from other effects of the health care system. To validate clinical vignettes as a method for measuring the competence of physicians and the quality of their actual practice. Prospective trial conducted in 1997 comparing 3 methods for measuring the quality of care for 4 common outpatient conditions: (1) structured reports by standardized patients (SPs), trained actors who presented unannounced to physicians' clinics (the gold standard); (2) abstraction of medical records for those same visits; and (3) physicians' responses to clinical vignettes that exactly corresponded to the SPs' presentations. Setting Outpatient primary care clinics at 2 Veterans Affairs medical centers. Ninety-eight (97%) of 101 general internal medicine staff physicians, faculty, and second- and third-year residents consented to be randomized for the study. From this group, 10 physicians at each site were randomly selected for inclusion. A total of 160 quality scores (8 cases x 20 physicians) were generated for each method using identical explicit criteria based on national guidelines and local expert panels. Scores were defined as the percentage of process criteria correctly met and were compared among the 3 methods. The quality of care, as measured by all 3 methods, ranged from 76.2% (SPs) to 71.0% (vignettes) to 65.6% (chart abstraction). Measuring quality using vignettes consistently produced scores closer to the gold standard of SP scores than using chart abstraction. This pattern was robust when the scores were disaggregated by the 4 conditions (P<.001 to <.05), by case complexity (P<.001), by site (P<.001), and by level of physician training (P values from <.001 to <.05). The pattern persisted, although less dominantly, when we assessed the component domains of the clinical encounter--history, physical examination, diagnosis, and treatment. Vignettes were responsive to expected directions of variation in quality between sites and levels of training. The vignette responses did not appear to be sensitive to physicians' having seen an SP presenting with the same case. Our data indicate that quality of health care can be measured in an outpatient setting by using clinical vignettes. Vignettes appear to be a valid and comprehensive method that directly focuses on the process of care provided in actual clinical practice. Vignettes show promise as an inexpensive case-mix adjusted method for measuring the quality of care provided by a group of physicians.
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            Clinical vignette-based surveys: a tool for assessing physician practice variation.

            Clinical vignette-based surveys have been used for more than 30 years to measure variation in physicians' approaches to the diagnosis and treatment of patients with similar health problems. Vignettes offer advantages over medical record reviews, analysis of claims data, and standardized patients. A vignette-based survey can be completed more quickly than a record review or standardized patient program. Research has shown that vignette-based surveys produce better measures of quality of care than medical record reviews when used to measure differential diagnosis, selection of tests, and treatment decisions. Although standardized patients are preferred when measuring communication and physical examination skills, vignettes are more cost-effective than standardized patients when assessing clinical physicians' decision making. Vignettes offer better opportunities to isolate physicians' decision making and to control case-mix variation than do analyses of claims data sets. Clinical vignette-based surveys are simple and economical tools that can be used to characterize physicians' practice variation.
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              Outcomes of referrals by community optometrists to a hospital glaucoma service.

              To determine the outcomes resulting from optometric referrals to a specialist glaucoma screening clinic over a 10 year period. Details of the initial clinical assessment of all new patients referred to the adult glaucoma screening clinic at Oxford Eye Hospital were collected prospectively from July 1994 to June 2004. Optometrists working in community practice initiated 2505 referrals. Of these, glaucoma was confirmed in 510 patients (20.4%), including 160 with normal intraocular pressure (IOP). A diagnosis of ocular hypertension was made in 747 patients (29.8% of referrals) and 125 (5.0%) were categorised as glaucoma suspects. There was no evidence of a diagnostic trend over the period of data collection. Treatment to lower IOP was commenced in 458 patients (18.3%). Nearly half of those referred, 1148 (45.8%), were discharged from ophthalmological review at the first visit. In this survey, the largest of its nature, only one in five subjects had glaucoma and nearly half were discharged from hospital ophthalmological review. The findings provide a baseline against which the effectiveness of any future system of glaucoma detection in the United Kingdom can be compared.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                j.g.lawrenson@city.ac.uk
                Journal
                Ophthalmic Physiol Opt
                Ophthalmic Physiol Opt
                10.1111/(ISSN)1475-1313
                OPO
                Ophthalmic & Physiological Optics
                John Wiley and Sons Inc. (Hoboken )
                0275-5408
                1475-1313
                17 April 2019
                May 2019
                : 39
                : 3 ( doiID: 10.1111/opo.2019.39.issue-3 )
                : 205-215
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ] Division of Optometry and Visual Science City University of London London UK
                [ 2 ] Moorfields Eye Hospital NHS Foundation Trust London UK
                Author notes
                [*] [* ] Correspondence: John Lawrenson

                E‐mail address: j.g.lawrenson@ 123456city.ac.uk

                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1200-9438
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2031-6390
                Article
                OPO12613
                10.1111/opo.12613
                6849707
                30994199
                6dd15d2b-f6e7-4370-9bd8-ba33ba8e65ce
                © 2019 The Authors. Ophthalmic and Physiological Optics published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of College of Optometrists

                This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 09 January 2019
                : 13 March 2019
                Page count
                Figures: 7, Tables: 2, Pages: 11, Words: 5929
                Funding
                Funded by: College of Optometrists , open-funder-registry 10.13039/100012909;
                Categories
                Original Article
                Original Articles
                Custom metadata
                2.0
                May 2019
                Converter:WILEY_ML3GV2_TO_JATSPMC version:5.7.1 mode:remove_FC converted:12.11.2019

                glaucoma,optic nerve,optical coherence tomography,optometrists,retina

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