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NatPaCT works with Primary & Care Trusts to help them learn & grow together , as connected and competent organisations and leaders of radical change to improve health & services for patients . Chronic Eye Disease Management in Community Settings:.
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NatPaCT works with Primary & Care Trusts to help them learn & grow together, as connectedand competent organisations and leaders of radical change to improve health & services for patients.
Chronic Eye Disease Management in Community Settings: First Report of the Eye Care Services Steering Group
Bob Ricketts Head of Access Policy Development & Capacity Planning Department of Health
Blindness: Vision 2020 - The Global • Initiative for the Elimination of Avoidable • Blindness • disease prevention and control • training of personnel • strengthening of the existing eye care infrastructure • use of appropriate and affordable technology • mobilisation of resources
NHS PLAN Core Principles 3,4,8 • The NHS will shape its services around the needs and preferences of individual patients, their families and their carers • The NHS will respond to different needs of different populations • The NHS will work together with others to ensure a seamless service for patients
“Fair for all and personal to you” John Reid 16 July 2003
Eye Care Services Steering Group • Set up by Ministers in December 2002 • Worked on GMS, dentistry and pharmacy and ophthalmics now moving forward • Growing need for eyecare services and major quality of life issues
Source ONS Source ONS Source ONS
Half of over 65s have impaired vision in one or both eyes • Increase in elderly
Four Pathways • Cataract • Glaucoma • Age Related Macular Degeneration (ARMD) • Low Vision Services • Diabetic retinopathy being tackled separately as part of Diabetes NSF
Design Principles • Make best use of available resources • Have fewer steps for the user • Make more effective use of professional resource • Show a high standard of clinical care with good outcomes • Improve access and deliver greater patient choice • Evidence based
Conclusions • Primary care ophthalmic services need to be developed to meet demographic demand • Partnerships with primary & secondary care, patients and carers essential • Integrated IT needed but not prerequisite • Voluntary agency and social services involvement important
Care Pathways Designed to Achieve: • Integrated eye care services • Better use of skills in primary care • Increased amount of care for all in accessible primary care settings • Increased role for professional groups in primary care
Recommendations • Cataract pathway to be implemented when waiting times reduced to 3 months • £73million additional funding to achieve 3 month cataract waits by December 2004 • Glaucoma pathway to be piloted initially • ARMD and Low Vision to be taken forward within existing funds • £4million for innovative projects and pilots • GOS Regulations to be amended to allow direct referral by optometrists
Why are we here? • Share our report with you • Consider, if you agree with us, how we take it forward together
Elizabeth Frost Director Association of Optometrists & Chair, Cataract Working Group
Background • Mainly elderly population • Many misconceptions about cataract surgery • Changes in HES • Action on Cataracts
Current Cataract Pathway • Patient reports sight problem to GP • Patient goes to optometrist/OMP for sight test and optometrist/OMP refers patient to GP • Patient goes to GP, referred to HES • Patient seen at HES, cataract confirmed, decision to operate, and put on waiting list • Patient attends HES for pre-op assessment • Patient attends HES for day case surgery • Patient attends HES for 24 hr check • Patient attends HES for 6 week check, 2nd eye discussed • Patient attends optometrist/OMP for sight test and new specs.
Proposed Cataract Pathway • Patient attends optometrist/OMP for sight test, cataract diagnosed and discussed, general risks & benefits of surgery explained, current medication listed, patient information given, and appointment made for HES, with choice of provider (copy of referral to GP for info) • Patient attends HES to see ophthalmologist and for pre-op assessment • Patient attends HES for day case surgery • Patient attends HES/optometrist/OMP for 24/48 hr check OR is phoned by cataract nurse to check progress (agreed locally) • Patient attends optometrist/OMP for final check and sight test, 2nd eye discussed.
Proposed Cataract Pathway Start Finish • 1. Patient attends optometrist • Sight test, cataract diagnosed and discussed • General risks and benefits of surgery discussed • Patient wishes to proceed, information given etc • Patient offered choice of hospital and appointment agreed • 4. Patient attends HES • or Optometrist • Final check • Sight test • Discharged or • 2nd eye discussed and • appointment arranged • 2. Patient attends HES • Outpatient appointment with • ophthalmologist* • pre-assessment (with nurse?) • Date for surgery arranged/agreed • (* details of medication etc • received from optometrist, GP or • patient as per local protocols ) • 3. Patient attends HES • Day case surgery undertaken
Who should be referred? • Not a ‘fast track’ service • Suitable for those who – • have a cataract that is interfering with their daily living • have been given basic information about cataract surgery, and risks / benefits • want to have surgery
Evidence of Success • Several services developed and audited • 90%+ referrals proceeding to surgery • cf 80% for traditional referrals • Reduced time to surgery from 12 to 3 months • Surgical outcomes meet RCO guidelines • Reduced DNA rates • Greater nurse involvement • High patient satisfaction
Constraints to Success • Not funded centrally through GOS budget • To be funded by existing PCT budgets • Investment needed in equipment and staffing • Needs mutual inter-professional trust and teamwork • Lack of IT booking links will hamper
Key Recommendations for local action • Reduce number of steps in pathway • Eliminate duplication • Improve IT links – optometrist/OMP/HES • Develop protocols for discharge from HES to optometrist/OMP with audit feedback • Agree funding
Stephen Vernon Royal College of Ophthalmologists & Chair, Glaucoma Working Group
Chronic Glaucoma gives tunnel vision 10 years
UK population by age - 2001 Age range
BMES PREVALENCE OF POAG <60 60-69 70-79 >80 Age Group
Current Glaucoma Pathway(Hospital Based Care) • Single screening opportunity by community optometrists with no standardised protocols • Diagnosis and continued care for life of all glaucoma (and many suspects) within Hospital Eye Service by ophthalmologists
Proposed Pathway (Community Based Care) • Community optometrists work to nationally agreed screening protocols which permit refinement of tests prior to referral • Glaucoma suspects and stable glaucoma patients managed in the community by COs and OMPs with interaction of community and HES teams where appropriate
The 5 Care Pathways Care Pathway 1 Ocular Hypertension Care Pathway 2 Glaucoma without other eye disease Care Pathway 3 Glaucoma suspect on discs and/or fields Care Pathway 4 Glaucoma in presence of other significant eye disease Care Pathway 5 Refinement of community optometric referrals
Proposed Glaucoma Pathway Start • 1. Patient attends community optometrist (CO) • Sight test, IOP over 21 (applanation tonometry) and/or visual field defect and/or excavated discs • Patient/optometrist makes appointment with optometrist with special interest in glaucoma (OSI) or OMP • 4. OSI/OMP manages patient in community setting • Regular reviews set in place • OSI/OMP relay data to hospital if significant progression for HES review if needed • 2. Patient attends OSI or OMP • Full history and assessment carried out according to protocol • Decision taken as to whether patient has ocular hypertension (OSI/OMP reviews) or can be discharged (return to CO) or has glaucoma (treat or refer to HES) • Patient advised, given information etc and further appropriate appointments made if needed • 3. OSI/OMP relays data to HES • HES reviews data, advises OSI/OMP regarding management and sets up review at HES if needed
Evidence Base • Only 33% of suspect glaucoma referrals found to have glaucoma by HES • Optometrists with additional training can assist in glaucoma management freeing up ophthalmologist and hospital time • Refinement of referrals for suspect glaucoma by specially trained optometrists reduces HES referrals
Constraints to Achievement • Funding issues - increased revenue costs • Training requirements • Legal issues for prescribing rights • Information Technology issues • Communication • Record keeping • Audit
Key Recommendations for Local Action • Community optometrists conform to College guidelines for referral of glaucoma suspects • HES services utilise optometrists to assist in glaucoma care within the HES • Community refinement of optometric referrals established utilising OMPs and optometrists with a special interest in glaucoma • Community care of “straightforward” glaucoma cases by OMPs and optometrists with a special interest in glaucoma
Frank Munro President College of Optometrists & Chair, ARMD Working Group
OBJECTIVES • Map out the current care pathway • Identify inhibitors & barriers to change • Identify areas for improvement • Develop proposals for a new integrated care pathway for patients with ARMD
WHAT IS AGE RELATED MACULAR DEGENERATION(ARMD)? • Acquired condition - > over 60 years • ‘Wet’ & ‘Dry’ forms • Affects central vision • Almost 1 million in England • Commonest cause of irremediable visual loss • Accounts for 14% blind & partially sighted registrations( 50% for those > 65yrs) • Limited credible treatment options
ASSOCIATION BETWEEN VISUAL IMPAIRMENT &….. • Increased mortality • Increased morbidity / falls / fractures • Increased road accidents • Increased anxiety & depression • Poorer self care & independence • Greater need for community & institutional resources • Social isolation - quality of life • Loss of income
DEMOGRAPHICS • By 2020 • A 25% increase in the over 65 population is expected • Incidence of ARMD expected to rise by 31% • AMD • 1998 approximately 8.3 • on people over the age of 65 in England and Wales • 4.3 million have impaired vision • AMD is the leading cause in over 65s
AMD: A Growing Problem • Burden recognised by government • NSF for Older People • Vision impairment is an intrinsic risk factor for falls • NICE: Recent guidance on PDT for wet-AMD • NICE to review new treatments in 2005 • In meeting future demand, service will have to respond to increasing patient numbers and delivering new therapies
Current Services • There are many good points about today’s services: • Access to angiography in most (if not all) eye departments • Access to Argon laser in all eye departments • Great awareness of AMD in general optical services • Prompt access for suspected wet AMD in most secondary care sites • In some centres access to LVA, LV1, social services advice is almost one stop