J Acad Ophthalmol (2017)
July 2022
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1055/s-0042-1756133.].
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Acad Ophthalmol (2017)
July 2022
Objective: This article describes a formal ophthalmology residency mentorship program, identifies its strengths and weaknesses over 5 years of implementation, and proposes strategies to improve qualitative outcomes of the mentorship program.
Design: Cross-sectional anonymous online survey.
Subjects: All current and former mentees and mentors at the Casey Eye Institute (CEI) residency program from 2016 to 2021.
Electronic Health Records (EHRs) are widely used in the United States for clinical care and billing activities. Their widespread adoption has raised a variety of concerns about their effects on providers and medical care. As researchers address these concerns, they will need to understand how much time providers actually spend on the EHR.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: To improve clinic efficiency through development of an ophthalmology scheduling template developed using simulation models and electronic health record (EHR) data.
Design: We created a computer simulation model of 1 pediatric ophthalmologist's clinic using EHR timestamp data, which was used to develop a scheduling template based on appointment length (short, medium, or long). We assessed its impact on clinic efficiency after implementation in the practices of 5 different pediatric ophthalmologists.
Improving the efficiency of outpatient clinics is challenging in the face of increased patient loads, decreased reimbursements and potential negative productivity impacts of using electronic health records (EHR). We modeled outpatient ophthalmology clinic workflow using discrete event simulation for testing new scheduling templates that decrease patient wait time and improve clinic efficiency. Despite challenges in implementing the new scheduling templates in one outpatient clinic, the new templates improved patient wait time and clinic session length when they were followed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPediatric ophthalmologists were surveyed to determine current practice patterns regarding ophthalmic imaging for children and to identify perceived barriers to the adoption of imaging technologies in their practices. Some form of imaging was available in the majority of practices (94%), but its use varied widely among different clinical scenarios. The two most frequently perceived barriers to performing imaging in children were cooperation and lack of sufficient data supporting ophthalmic imaging in clinical practice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFImportance: Electronic health record (EHR) systems have transformed the practice of medicine. However, physicians have raised concerns that EHR time requirements have negatively affected their productivity. Meanwhile, evolving approaches toward physician reimbursement will require additional documentation to measure quality and cost of care.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Outpatient clinics lack guidance for tackling modern efficiency and productivity demands. Workflow studies require large amounts of timing data that are prohibitively expensive to collect through observation or tracking devices. Electronic health records (EHRs) contain a vast amount of timing data - timestamps collected during regular use - that can be mapped to workflow steps.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClinicians today face increased patient loads, decreased reimbursements and potential negative productivity impacts of using electronic health records (EHR), but have little guidance on how to improve clinic efficiency. Discrete event simulation models are powerful tools for evaluating clinical workflow and improving efficiency, particularly when they are built from secondary EHR timing data. The purpose of this study is to demonstrate that these simulation models can be used for resource allocation decision making as well as for evaluating novel scheduling strategies in outpatient ophthalmology clinics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Cobalamin C disease (cblC), which leads to methylmalonic acidemia with homocystinuria, is the most common inherited disorder of vitamin B12 metabolism. Reported ocular findings associated with cblC have been maculopathy, pigmentary retinopathy, and optic nerve atrophy. Cobalamin A disease (cblA) which causes an isolated methylmalonic acidemia without homocystinuria is rarer than cblC.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFImportance: While older children and adults with achromatopsia have been studied, less is known of young children with achromatopsia.
Objectives: To characterize the macular and foveal architecture of patients with achromatopsia during early childhood with handheld spectral-domain optical coherence tomographic imaging and to make phenotype-genotype correlations.
Design, Setting, And Participants: Comparative case series of 9 patients with achromatopsia and 9 age-matched control participants at a tertiary ophthalmology referral center.
Background: This study identifies the clinical and ocular motility characteristics of the periodic and aperiodic forms of infantile alternating nystagmus (IAPAN) and establishes the range of electrophysiological and clinical characteristics while providing clues to its presence and pathophysiology.
Methods: Seventy-eight patients with ocular oscillations consistent with IAPAN were reported. Outcome variables were: age, follow-up in months, vision, strabismus, other eye and systemic abnormalities, head position, periodicity, cycle and null period duration, foveation time, waveforms, and cycle symmetry.