Purpose: To compare glaucoma referral patterns between glaucoma and OCT report specialists and to determine what influence, if any, a designated OCT reading could have on a glaucoma specialist's judgments.
Design: Retrospective, exploratory study.
Subjects: We included 483 eyes (243 individuals) from high-risk New York City neighborhoods screened as part of a mobile van glaucoma screening study from July 2017 to October 2017.
Purpose: To examine the benefits and feasibility of a mobile, real-time, community-based, teleophthalmology program for detecting eye diseases in the New York metro area.
Design: Single site, nonrandomized, cross-sectional, teleophthalmologic study.
Methods: Participants underwent a comprehensive evaluation in a Wi-Fi-equipped teleophthalmology mobile unit.
Purpose: The aim of this study was to assess the benefit and feasibility of the teleophthalmology GlobeChek kiosk in a community-based program.
Design: Single-site, nonrandomized, cross-sectional, teleophthalmologic study.
Methods: Participants underwent comprehensive evaluation that consists of a questionnaire form, brief systemic evaluation, screening visual field (VF), and GlobeChek kiosk screening, which included but not limited to intraocular pressure, pachymetry, anterior segment optical coherence tomography, posterior segment optical coherence tomography, and nonmydriatic fundus photography.