Applying a Military Teleophthalmology Mobile App in a Noncombat Emergent Care Setting

被引:1
作者
Chung, Robert T. [1 ]
Legault, Gary L. [2 ,3 ]
Stowe, Jennifer S. [4 ]
Miller, Kyle E. [3 ,5 ]
Moccia, Michelle A. [6 ]
Cooper, Mabel R. [7 ]
Little, Jeanette R. [8 ]
Gensheimer, William G. [1 ,9 ]
机构
[1] Geisel Sch Med Dartmouth, Hanover, NH 03755 USA
[2] Brooke Army Med Ctr, Dept Ophthalmol, Ft Sam Houston, TX 78234 USA
[3] Uniformed Serv Univ Hlth Sci, Dept Surg, Bethesda, MD 20814 USA
[4] Naval Med Ctr Portsmouth, Dept Ophthalmol, Portsmouth, VA 23708 USA
[5] Warfighter Eye Ctr, Joint Base Andrews, MD 20762 USA
[6] Telemed & Adv Technol Res Ctr TATRC, Ft Detrick, MD 21702 USA
[7] Digital Hlth Innovat Ctr DHIC, Ft Gordon, GA 30905 USA
[8] US Army Med Res & Dev Command MRDC, Ft Detrick, MD 21702 USA
[9] White River Junct VA Med Ctr, Sect Ophthalmol, White River Jct, VT 05001 USA
关键词
UNITED-STATES;
D O I
10.1093/milmed/usac345
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Introduction Teleophthalmology has a natural role in the military due to the inherent organization of its medical system, which provides care to patients in remote locations around the world. Improving access to ophthalmic care enhances force readiness because ocular trauma and disease can cause vision impairment or blindness and can occur anywhere service members are located. Recently, a secure, Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act-compliant mobile phone application (app) for teleophthalmology called Forward Operating Base Expert Telemedicine Resource Utilizing Mobile Application for Trauma (FOXTROT) was beta tested in Afghanistan and demonstrated that this solution can improve and extend ophthalmic care in a deployed environment. There are few civilian or military teleophthalmology solutions for ocular trauma and disease in an urgent or emergent ophthalmic care setting. Civilian teleophthalmology solutions have largely been developed for disease-specific models of care. In this work, we address this gap by testing the FOXTROT app in a non-deployed, emergent care setting. Materials and Methods We evaluated the use of the teleophthalmology mobile phone app (FOXTROT) in a non-deployed military setting at the Malcolm Grow Medical Clinics and Surgery Center at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland. Consults from the emergent care center were placed by providers using the app, and the on-call ophthalmologist responded with treatment and management recommendations. The primary outcomes were response within the requested time, visual acuity tested in both eyes, agreement between the teleophthalmology and the final diagnosis, and the number of communication or technical errors that prevented the completion of consults. The secondary outcomes were average response time and the number of consults uploaded to the medical record. Results From October 2020 to January 2022, 109 consults were received. Ten consults had communication or technical errors that prevented the completion of consults within the app and were excluded from the analysis of completed consults. Of the 99 completed consults, responses were given within the requested time in 95 (96.0%), with the average response time in 11 minutes 48 seconds (95% confidence interval, 8 minutes 57 seconds to 14 minutes 41 seconds). Visual acuity was tested in both eyes in 56 (56.6%). There was agreement between the teleophthalmology diagnosis and the final diagnosisin 40 of 50 (80.0%) consults with both a teleophthalmology and final diagnosis. Ninety-eight (99.0%) consults were uploaded to the patient's medical record. Conclusions Beta testing of a teleophthalmology mobile phone app (FOXTROT) in a noncombat emergent care setting demonstrated that this solution can extend ophthalmic care in this environment at a military treatment facility. However, improvements in the reliability of the platform are needed in future developments to reduce communication and technical errors.
引用
收藏
页码:E2909 / E2915
页数:7
相关论文
共 29 条
[1]   Teleophthalmology in the United States Army: A Review From 2004 Through 2018 [J].
Anthony, Christopher M. ;
Altman, Adam H. ;
Otte, Benjamin ;
Mines, Michael J. ;
Mazzoli, Robert A. ;
Lappan, Charles M. ;
Legault, Gary L. .
MILITARY MEDICINE, 2023, 188 (1-2) :E182-E189
[2]   Ophthalmic injuries in British Armed Forces in Iraq and Afghanistan [J].
Blanch, R. J. ;
Bindra, M. S. ;
Jacks, A. S. ;
Scott, R. A. H. .
EYE, 2011, 25 (02) :218-223
[3]   Deployed ophthalmic workload in support of US and NATO operations in Afghanistan [J].
Blanch, Richard J. ;
Kerber, M. T. ;
Gensheimer, W. G. .
BMJ MILITARY HEALTH, 2021, 167 (06) :408-412
[4]   Effectiveness of an internet-based store-and-forward telemedicine system for pediatric subspecialty consultation [J].
Callahan, CW ;
Malone, F ;
Estroff, D ;
Person, DA .
ARCHIVES OF PEDIATRICS & ADOLESCENT MEDICINE, 2005, 159 (04) :389-393
[5]   Telemedical retinopathy of prematurity diagnosis - Accuracy, reliability, and image quality [J].
Chiang, Michael F. ;
Wang, Lu ;
Busuioc, Mihai ;
Du, Yunling E. ;
Chan, Patrick ;
Kane, Steven A. ;
Lee, Thomas C. ;
Weissgold, David J. ;
Berrocal, Audina M. ;
Coki, Osode ;
Flynn, John T. ;
Starren, Justin .
ARCHIVES OF OPHTHALMOLOGY, 2007, 125 (11) :1531-1538
[6]   Utility and Feasibility of Teleophthalmology Using a Smartphone-Based Ophthalmic Camera in Screening Camps in Nepal [J].
Collon, Sean ;
Chang, David ;
Tabin, Geoffrey ;
Hong, Karen ;
Myung, David ;
Thapa, Suman .
ASIA-PACIFIC JOURNAL OF OPHTHALMOLOGY, 2020, 9 (01) :54-58
[7]   A Review of Ophthalmic Telemedicine for Emergency Department Settings [J].
De Arrigunaga, Sofia ;
Aziz, Kanza ;
Lorch, Alice C. ;
Friedman, David S. ;
Armstrong, Grayson W. .
SEMINARS IN OPHTHALMOLOGY, 2022, 37 (01) :83-90
[8]   Correlative Factors for Traumatic Brain Injury in Combat Ocular Trauma [J].
Flor, Remigio ;
Purt, Boonkit ;
Sia, Rose K. ;
Ryan, Denise S. ;
Kagemann, Janice M. ;
Powell, Brittany E. ;
French, Louis M. ;
Beydoun, Hind ;
Justin, Grant A. ;
Colyer, Marcus H. .
MILITARY MEDICINE, 2023, 188 (7-8) :E1729-E1733
[9]   Military Teleophthalmology in Afghanistan Using Mobile Phone Application [J].
Gensheimer, William G. ;
Miller, Kyle E. ;
Stowe, Jennifer ;
Little, Jeanette ;
Legault, Gary L. .
JAMA OPHTHALMOLOGY, 2020, 138 (10) :1053-1060
[10]   Evaluating barriers to adopting telemedicine worldwide: A systematic review [J].
Kruse, Clemens Scott ;
Karem, Priyanka ;
Shifflett, Kelli ;
Vegi, Lokesh ;
Ravi, Karuna ;
Brooks, Matthew .
JOURNAL OF TELEMEDICINE AND TELECARE, 2018, 24 (01) :4-12