2021
DOI: 10.1186/s12909-020-02469-8
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Perceived usefulness and ease of use of fundoscopy by medical students: a randomised crossover trial of six technologies (eFOCUS 1)

Abstract: Background Fundoscopy outside ophthalmology is in decline, and the technical demands of the traditional direct ophthalmoscope examination are likely contributing. Alternative fundoscopy technologies are increasingly available, yet valid comparisons between fundoscopy technologies are lacking. We aimed to assess medical students’ perceptions of usefulness and ease of use of traditional and contemporary fundus-viewing technologies including smartphone fundoscopy. Me… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…16 Our group has already shown that medical students perceive smartphone fundoscopy as easier to use and more useful than the TDO, critical differences which predict the future use of technologies. 17 Studies among small groups of medical students have shown a strong preference for smartphone fundoscopy, quicker identification of fundus anatomy, 18 and greater accuracy for common ophthalmic diagnoses. 19 However the generalisability of improved diagnostic accuracy using smartphone devices remains to be shown among a broad student cohort.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…16 Our group has already shown that medical students perceive smartphone fundoscopy as easier to use and more useful than the TDO, critical differences which predict the future use of technologies. 17 Studies among small groups of medical students have shown a strong preference for smartphone fundoscopy, quicker identification of fundus anatomy, 18 and greater accuracy for common ophthalmic diagnoses. 19 However the generalisability of improved diagnostic accuracy using smartphone devices remains to be shown among a broad student cohort.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This suggests fundal images could be obtained easily by junior doctors, clinic nurses or other allied health staff, possibly at the time of obtaining vital signs. NMFP by ED nurse practitioners was feasible after only 30 min of training in diverse settings [1, 23], and junior medical students have found SF easier to use and more useful than DO [44, 45]. Additionally, a study found no difference in image quality when comparing images obtained by a trained ophthalmic photographer (20 years of experience) with non‐professional photographers (one with 2 days and one with 1 h of training) [46].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Novel fundoscopy technologies such as smartphone fundoscopy and non-mydriatic cameras have the capacity to obviate many of the technical barriers of TDO [8]. Direct fundoscopy takes years to perform competently [30], whilst most studies have found smartphone fundoscopy is preferred by medical students and junior doctors [9,31] and has greater accuracy [14,32,33]. Such devices offer the advantage of a shared view for feedback during training, which was important to optometry students [34], and has been shown to improve clinical performance [35].…”
Section: Plos Onementioning
confidence: 99%
“…There has been progress in the ease of fundoscopy, with emerging technologies including smartphone adaptors and increasingly portable non-mydriatic cameras [8,9]. However increasing fundoscopy utilisation has been more elusive [10].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%