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Internet Program
Launched to Prevent Blindness in Diabetic Patients
posted May 12, 2005
New High Tech Study to determine if
early screening using a special camera and images transmitted over the Internet
can prevent blindness in Medicaid patients with diabetes.
“Medicaid patients are rarely screened and are at risk of becoming blind,” said
Ramon Velez, M.D., M. Sc., the principal investigator. Diabetes is the leading
cause of preventable blindness in the United States and Velez said the study
will determine if early referral to ophthalmologists will help.
The project – “I See in NC” – is being pilot-tested at Downtown Health Plaza of
Baptist Hospital, where Velez is medical director, and then will be offered to
two rural networks of Community Care of North Carolina. One is Central Piedmont
Access II, the other is Access III of the Lower Cape Fear. About 2,000 Medicaid
adults with diabetes will be asked to participate.
The other networks of Community Care will get the usual treatment, and Velez and
his colleagues will determine whether the screening indeed reduces blindness
among patients with diabetic retinopathy because ophthalmologists can act early.
Diabetes can lead to changes in blood vessels in the retina called diabetic
retinopathy.
Digital photography is the key to the proposal. Trained nurses will take retinal
photographs using a special digital camera, and the digital images will be
transmitted over the Internet and read at a new screening center at Wake Forest
University School of Medicine, Velez said.
“Adults with diabetes continue to go blind despite the availability of effective
treatment for sight-threatening diabetic retinopathy,” said Velez. “These cases
of blindness are partially attributable to the low levels of screening.
Screening identifies changes in the eye that the patient may not recognize. If
treated early, blindness can be prevented.”
But, he said, among Medicare patients who have diabetes, more that 30 percent do
not get the recommended annual eye screening examination by ophthalmologists.
The rate of screening among N.C. Medicaid patients is about 14 percent.
“Primary care physicians rarely perform dilated eye examinations, and the
reliability of their examination has been shown to be low,” said Velez, a
professor of medicine at Wake Forest University School of Medicine and a primary
care physician himself. “A recent review of diabetic patients at the Downtown
Health Plaza showed that fewer than 20 percent reported having been to an
ophthalmologist in the previous three years.”
He said that taking retinal photographs in primary care settings is a potential
alternative to early testing by ophthalmologists. He said that early trials
using film or Polaroid cameras had been effective.
“The recent development of digital retinal photography has spurred a movement to
employ this new technology with images transmitted by the Internet to central
reading centers,” Velez said.
He said that in the pilot testing stage, the team is using a Canon retinal
camera, acquired through a grant from the North Carolina Lions Foundation. A
diabetic retinopathy reading center is being established at the School of
Medicine in cooperation with the Department of Ophthalmology. William P. Moran,
M.D., formerly head of the Section on General Internal Medicine, is
co-investigator.
Source: Diabetes In Control.com.
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