| Literature DB >> 29351207 |
Rahima Muhammad Kashim1, Paul Newton2, Omorogieva Ojo3.
Abstract
Diabetic Retinopathy is a microvascular complication of diabetes, that can go undetected and unnoticed until irreversible damage and even blindness has occurred. Effective screening for diabetic retinopathy has been proven to reduce the risk of sight loss. The National Health Service (NHS) which provides healthcare for all UK citizens, implemented systematic retinal screening for diabetic retinopathy in England in 2003, with the aim of identifying and treating all patients with sight threatening retinopathy. Crucial to this is patients partaking in the programme. Therefore, increasing screening uptake has been a major focus of the programme. This review explores the views of people living with diabetes who do not attend retinal screening, their characteristics, concerns, experiences of retinal screening and their understanding of the risks of diabetic retinopathy. All studies that satisfied the study inclusion criteria on 'patients' non-attendance at retinal screening', between 2003 to 2017 were included after extensive database search. A total of 16 studies were included in the review. Findings showed that socio-economic deprivation was a major risk factor for non-attendance, about 11.5-13.4% of the screened population had sight threatening retinopathy (STDR), repeated nonattendance was linked to sight threatening diabetic retinopathy, and that certain factors, could be barriers or incentives for screening uptake. Some of those factors are modifiable whilst others are not.Entities:
Keywords: diabetic retinopathy; patients’ non-attendance; retinal screening; systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29351207 PMCID: PMC5800256 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph15010157
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Search terms.
| Index Term | Synonyms | Related Terms |
|---|---|---|
| Patients non-attendance | (1a) Patients no show
| (1f) AWOL
|
| Retinal Screening | (2a) Diabetic eye test
| (2d) retinal monitoring
|
| motives | (3a) Attitudes
| (3e) Drive
|
Search strategy.
| Date | Search Terms Used | No. of Papers Excluded | No. of Papers Included |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ebscohost | |||
| 20/3/17 | 1 [OR] 1a and 2 | 10 | 2 |
| 1 [OR] 1c and 2 | 30 | 7 | |
| 22/3/17 | |||
| 1c and 2a | 2 | 0 | |
| 1 and 2b | 3 | 2 | |
| 1 and 2e | 1 | 0 | |
| 1c and 2 and 3d | 2 | 1 | |
| Web of Science | |||
| 24/3/17 | 1 [OR] 1a and 2 | 1 | 2 |
| 3 [OR] 3d and 2 | 95 | 7 | |
| Science Direct | |||
| 27/3/17 | 3d and 2 | 2018 | 6 |
| 1c and 2 | 1908 | 4 | |
| 1 and 2 [OR] 2b | 124 | 0 | |
| 1a [OR] 1c and 2 | 39,708 | 2 | |
| 1a [OR] 1h and 2 | 2686 | 9 | |
| 1a–1h and 2 [OR] 2b | 8 | ||
| Cochrance Library | |||
| 03/4/17 | 3d and 2 | 24 | 0 |
| 3d and 2 | 1 | ||
| Nice Database | |||
| 06/4/17 | NICE and 2d | 215 | 35 |
| Scopus | |||
| 15/06/17 | 1 [OR] 1c and 2 | 5 | 1 |
| 3 [OR] 3d and 2 [OR] 2b and 1 | 7 | 5 | |
| Total: 92 | |||
Figure 1Flow chart showing the article selection process.
Showing characteristics of included studies.
| Studies | Participants | Methods Used | Aim | Main Outcome | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lake et al. 2017 (UK) [ | Young adults with T2D | 30 | Structured interviews | Explore factors associated with non-attendance | Some factors such as social influences, etc. are peculiar to younger adults with T2D. |
| Al-Alawi et al. 2016 (Saudi Arabia) [ | Hospital staff with diabetes | 45 | close ended questionnaire | Evaluate knowledge, attitudes and barriers to screening | Most of the participants had excellent knowledge about diabetic eye complications, absence of gender specific-professionals was a cause for non-attendance. |
| Strutton et al. 2016 (UK)[ | Screening DNAs (≥18 months) | 146 | Telephone Interview | Identify patient and system level reasons for non-attendance | Patients reasons included, having other commitments, anxiety etc. and system level reasons were mostly about miscommunication. |
| Piling et al. 2015 (UK) [ | Diabetics with learning disability | 71 | Retrospective analysis | Find out if there is equality of access for patients with learning disability | National standards are not met for diabetic patients with learning disabilities |
| Hipwell et al. 2014 (UK) [ | Staff and diabetic patients | 62 | Semi-structured interviews | Examine experiences with screening and how that affects uptake | Knowledge of DR was a major antecedent to screening, and psychological, pragmatic and social factors were antecedents to non-attendance. |
| Lindenmeyer et al. 2014 (UK) [ | GPs | 9 GP practices | Semi-structured interviews | Identify factors that contribute to screening uptake | Some factors are modifiable such as improving communication, others were not such as diversity of ethnicity and languages. |
| Forster et al. 2013 (UK) [ | Patients first screened in 2008 | 6556 | Retrospective analysis | Evaluate whether repeated non-attendance was linked to STDR | Repeated non-attendance increases risk of STDR. |
| Van Eijk et al. 2012 (The Netherlands) [ | Diabetic patients ≥ 18 years | 2363 | Focus groups & Questionnaires | Examine barriers and incentives to screening | 81% attendance; non-attenders had lower education levels, shorter duration of diabetes and were less likely to use insulin or be checked by and internist. |
| Waqar et al. 2012 (UK) [ | Screening DNAs (04/09–03/10) | 22,651 | Retrospective analysis | Evaluate relationships between socio-economic status and non-attendance | Increasing non-attendance with deprivation, lowest DNAs seen in successful professionals and highest DNAs seen in areas of social housing |
| Gulliford et al. 2010 (UK) [ | Diabetic patients on a screening database | 59,495 | Retrospective analysis | Quantify socio-economic and ethnic in-equalities in screening | Only a weak association between non-attendance and deprivation, and smaller than previously reported inequality in screening. |
| Leese et al. 2008 (UK) [ | Diabetic patients on a screening database | 15,150 | Retrospective analysis | Identify characteristics that determine attendance status | Socio-economic deprivation increases non-attendance |
| Dervan et al. 2008 (Ireland) [ | Patients at diabetic centres | 209 | Questionnaires | Assess if patients are receiving regular screening and factors that influence uptake. | 81% of patients had screening done. Recommendation from a physician was a major factor in increasing uptake. |
| Scanlon et al. 2008 (UK) [ | Diabetic patients on a screening database | 10,312 | Retrospective analysis | Investigate socio-economic differences in prevalence of diabetes, DR and screening uptake | Probability of being screened decreased with deprivation, prevalence of diabetes and developing STDR was associated with increasing deprivation |
| Millet et al. 2006 (UK) [ | Diabetic patients on a screening database | 9750 | Retrospective analysis | Assess screening and screening outcome in South East London | 88.9% screening uptake, however, significant inequity in the delivery of the screening programme. |
| Zoega et al. 2005 (Iceland) [ | Patients on the Icelandic blind registry | 22 | Retrospective analysis | Find relationship between screening compliance and visual outcome | Blind patients had worse pre-diagnosis screening compliance |
| Hartnett et al. 2005 (USA) [ | Diabetic patients and physicians at an indigent clinic | 2145 records, 17 focus group participants | Focus group discussions and interviews | Address inadequate screening and explore perceived barriers. | Physicians and patients have different perceived barriers to screening, though they both agreed that accessing the care was also a barrier |
Figure A1Chart showing risk factors within a population that influences their screening uptake.
Figure A2Reported screening uptake.