Partnership for Glaucoma
Status: | Completed |
---|---|
Conditions: | Ocular |
Therapuetic Areas: | Ophthalmology |
Healthy: | No |
Age Range: | Any |
Updated: | 11/18/2012 |
Start Date: | October 2007 |
End Date: | March 2012 |
Contact: | Shelley L Keatts, BS |
Email: | shelley.keatts@duke.edu |
Phone: | 919-684-4032 |
Expanding Quality Care for Glaucoma Through a Provider-Patient Partnership
The purpose of this study is to develop new ways of assisting patients with glaucoma and
their eye doctors in using the recommendations from practice guidelines.
Glaucoma is a leading cause of blindness and visual impairment in the United States,
particularly among disadvantaged populations. Despite the presence of therapies proven in
NEI, randomized controlled trials that can be delivered by more than 18,000 ophthalmologists
and 34,000 optometrists, almost nothing is known about the content and quality of glaucoma
care delivered by non-MD providers such as optometrists. With the numbers of people with
glaucoma expected to more than double in the next twenty years in the face of no more than a
15% increase in the supply of eye care providers, methods to better support appropriate and
high-quality care for chronic eye diseases such as glaucoma delivered by optometrists will
become as critical, if not more so, as techniques to enhance quality care among
ophthalmologists.
Our study is a community-based, randomized, controlled trial that evaluates the suitability
and effectiveness of a technology-based (tablet computer) intervention within the context of
a novel partnership between optometrists and patients with glaucoma to improve the process
quality of care and ultimately outcomes of care. By using successfully implemented
technology in novel applications,and by building on the success of ongoing community-based
quality improvement projects in our region, the study provides a means for rapid translation
into community care if the intervention is successful.
Inclusion Criteria:
-Diagnosis of open angle glaucoma with documented visual field loss.
We found this trial at
2
sites
Duke University Younger than most other prestigious U.S. research universities, Duke University consistently ranks among...
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University of Alabama at Birmingham The University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) traces its roots...
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