This conservative repeatable protocol affords delivery of the minimum dose of photocoagulation necessary to achieve a safe, long-term ocular hypotensive response, while minimizing the risk of serious adverse effects, and is valuable in the difficult treatment of refractory glaucoma.
Purpose To compare patient data retrieval between electronic patient record systems (Eyetrack s ) and conventional paper records (CPRs). Methods A total of 20 long term glaucoma patient records held on Eyetrack were randomised into two collections with 10 CPRs and 10 Eyetrack records in each collection. The Eyetrack records of one collection were the CPRs of the other collection and vice versa. Four doctors, as two groups, were assessed on a separate collection of records. The time taken to answer 10 questions and the accuracy were assessed. Comparison was made of the answers between the two formats. A month later each group was assessed on the 10 CPRs of the other collection. An expert Eyetrack user was assessed on only the 20 Eyetrack notes. Comparison was made between the 20 CPRs the doctors were assessed on and the 20 eyetrack records. Results In the first comparison, the mean time for all the doctors to answer the questions on a CPR was 324.4(7106.0) s compared to 104.8(734.0) s for Eyetrack(Mann-Whitney, Po0.01). Mean accuracy for a CPR was 84.0%(713.0%) compared to 98.0%(74.0%) for Eyetrack(Mann-Whitney, Po0.01). Comparing the expert Eyetrack user with the CPR showed a mean time for Eyetrack of 96.6(734.8) s compared with 283.7(763.9) s for CPR (Mann-Whitney, Po0.0001). Mean accuracy for Eyetrack was 97.5%(77.2%) compared to 82.0%(78.7%) for CPRs(Mann-Whitney, Po0.0001).Conclusions An improvement of 3 min 40 s per record was observed with Eyetrack. Accuracy was also improved. Similar results were also found comparing an expert Eyetrack user with CPRs.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.