Prakash Paudel1, Sonja Cronjé, Patricia M O'Connor, Gullapalli N Rao, Brien A Holden. 1. Brien Holden Vision Institute, Sydney, Australia; School of Optometry and Vision Science, University of New South Wales, Kensington, Australia; Vision Cooperative Research Centre, Sydney, Australia. p.paudel@brienholdenvision.org.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Selection of a standard professional is crucial for assessing the clinical performance of other eye-care personnel. This paper describes the selection considerations and the clinical competency assessment of two optometrists required to select a 'standard optometrist' (SO) for evaluating the clinical performance of vision technicians in India. METHODS: Two optometrists were short-listed from 21 optometrists who responded to an advertisement to be selected as a SO for the assessment of the performance of 24 vision technicians in rural vision centres. Each candidate optometrist performed a routine eye examination on 40 randomly selected, newly registered subjects in a tertiary hospital clinic. Their non-cycloplegic retinoscopic findings were compared with those of an experienced optometrist, while disease diagnoses were compared with the findings of an ophthalmologist. RESULTS: A comparison of retinoscopic findings showed that optometrist A produced retinoscopic values within ±0.50 D agreement for the spherical equivalent (SE) 100 per cent of the time, while optometrist B obtained agreement 91.3 per cent of the time. Similarly, optometrist A's limits of agreement (SE = -0.63 to +0.45 D) and reproducibility limits (SE = 0.78 D) were better than those of optometrist B (SE = -0.98 to +0.70 D and SE =1.18 D, respectively). Optometrist A demonstrated 89.2 per cent sensitivity in detecting ocular pathology compared to 76.3 per cent by optometrist B. CONCLUSIONS: Optometrist A achieved consistent and reproducible retinoscopic findings as well as higher sensitivity in detecting ocular pathology and was selected as the SO for a study to assess the clinical performance of one-year trained vision technicians. The concept of a SO calibrated against an ophthalmologist for disease detection and diagnosis and an experienced optometrist for retinoscopy is a useful approach for the evaluation of eye-care personnel.
BACKGROUND: Selection of a standard professional is crucial for assessing the clinical performance of other eye-care personnel. This paper describes the selection considerations and the clinical competency assessment of two optometrists required to select a 'standard optometrist' (SO) for evaluating the clinical performance of vision technicians in India. METHODS: Two optometrists were short-listed from 21 optometrists who responded to an advertisement to be selected as a SO for the assessment of the performance of 24 vision technicians in rural vision centres. Each candidate optometrist performed a routine eye examination on 40 randomly selected, newly registered subjects in a tertiary hospital clinic. Their non-cycloplegic retinoscopic findings were compared with those of an experienced optometrist, while disease diagnoses were compared with the findings of an ophthalmologist. RESULTS: A comparison of retinoscopic findings showed that optometrist A produced retinoscopic values within ±0.50 D agreement for the spherical equivalent (SE) 100 per cent of the time, while optometrist B obtained agreement 91.3 per cent of the time. Similarly, optometrist A's limits of agreement (SE = -0.63 to +0.45 D) and reproducibility limits (SE = 0.78 D) were better than those of optometrist B (SE = -0.98 to +0.70 D and SE =1.18 D, respectively). Optometrist A demonstrated 89.2 per cent sensitivity in detecting ocular pathology compared to 76.3 per cent by optometrist B. CONCLUSIONS: Optometrist A achieved consistent and reproducible retinoscopic findings as well as higher sensitivity in detecting ocular pathology and was selected as the SO for a study to assess the clinical performance of one-year trained vision technicians. The concept of a SO calibrated against an ophthalmologist for disease detection and diagnosis and an experienced optometrist for retinoscopy is a useful approach for the evaluation of eye-care personnel.
Authors: Joaquín Fernández; Manuel Rodríguez-Vallejo; Javier Martínez; Noemi Burguera; David Piñero Journal: Int Ophthalmol Date: 2022-02-08 Impact factor: 2.029