| Literature DB >> 30455518 |
Venkata Sm Gudlavalleti1, Rajan Shukla1, Tripura Batchu1, Bala Vidyadhar S Malladi1, Clare Gilbert2.
Abstract
In India, 73 million people have diabetes and 3.5 million infants are born preterm. Without timely screening, there is a risk of visual loss due to diabetic retinopathy and retinopathy of prematurity in these two groups, respectively. Both conditions are emerging causes of visual impairment in India but there is no public health programme for screening or management. Pilot projects were initiated in 2014 to integrate the screening and management of these conditions into existing public health systems, particularly in rural communities and their referral networks. The World Health Organization's health systems framework was used to develop the projects and strategies were developed with all stakeholders, including the government. Both projects involved hub-and-spoke models of care units around medical schools. For diabetic retinopathy, screening was established at primary health-care facilities and treatment was provided at district hospitals. For retinopathy of prematurity, screening was integrated into sick newborn care units at the district level and treatment facilities were improved at the closest publically funded medical schools. In the first two years, there were substantial improvements in awareness, screening, treatment and partnership between stakeholders, and changes in public health policy. By March 2018, diabetic retinopathy screening was established at 50 facilities in 10 states and treatment had been improved at 10 hospitals, whereas retinopathy of prematurity screening was established at 16 sick newborn care units in district hospital in four states and treatment had been improved at six medical schools. Advocacy within state governments was critical to the success of the initiative.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30455518 PMCID: PMC6238995 DOI: 10.2471/BLT.18.212167
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bull World Health Organ ISSN: 0042-9686 Impact factor: 9.408
Diabetic retinopathy and retinopathy of prematurity pilot project initiatives at public health-care facilities, India, 2014–2018
| Health-care level | Health-care facility and personnel | Pilot project initiative |
|---|---|---|
| Primary – first point of contact | Subcentres: 1 per 5 000 population, each with 2 health workers and an additional female health worker (155 069 subcentres were operating in 2017); in each village, there was 1 accredited social health activist who acted as the community link for health programmes for every 1 000 people | Diabetic retinopathy: (i) annual screening for diabetes implemented at the community level, with people with a high random blood sugar level referred to medically qualified personnel at primary health centres. |
| Primary – first point of contact with medically qualified personnel | Primary health centres (1 per 30 000 population) that provide integrated health-care services for health promotion, prevention and cure and each have 1–2 medical officers supported by 15 paramedical staff (25 354 were operating in 2017) | Diabetic retinopathy: (i) register of people with diabetes established; (ii) diabetes drugs provided for free; and (iii) medical staff received training on diabetic retinopathy |
| Secondary – first point of contact with specialists | Community health centres (1 per 100 000 population) that provide in-patient facilities, employ 4 medical officers supported by 21 paramedical personnel each, and have internal medicine, paediatric and obstetric specialists and ophthalmic assistants for refraction and vision testing and postoperative care (5 510 were operating in 2017) | Diabetic retinopathy: (i) these centres were the first formal structures embedded in the diabetic retinopathy pilot projects that had the necessary infrastructure for screening for diabetic retinopathy; (ii) tablet computers were provided to register people with diabetes who attended these centres and were receiving treatment; (iii) 1 or 2 medical officers at each centre received training on diabetic retinopathy; (iv) fundus cameras provided for diabetic retinopathy screening; and (v) ophthalmic assistants underwent training in image capture and storage, with an emphasis on the initial grading of images |
| Secondary – referral pathway | District health centres (1 per 1.0–1.5 million population) that provide advanced care in most medical specialties and have an ophthalmologist, ophthalmic assistant, paediatrician and obstetrician (600 were operating in 2017) | Retinopathy of prematurity: (i) these centres provided the points of integration for retinopathy of prematurity screening; (ii) quality improvements were implemented in neonatal teams; (iii) staff and ophthalmologists in neonatal care units underwent training in setting up, managing and undertaking screening for retinopathy of prematurity; (iv) 1–2 ophthalmologists at each centre underwent training in both retinopathy of prematurity screening and laser treatment; and (v) equipment was provided for screening (i.e. indirect ophthalmoscopes) and laser treatment. |
| Tertiary – specialized referral pathway | Medical schools that are managed by the directorate of medical education and provide specialized medical care, including rehabilitation | Retinopathy of prematurity and diabetic retinopathy: (i) medical schools acted as mentoring partners on diabetic retinopathy and retinopathy of prematurity for staff in neighbouring districts. |
Fig. 1Flow diagram, retinopathy of prematurity and diabetic retinopathy pilot projects, India, 2014–2018
Development of retinopathy of prematurity and diabetic retinopathy pilot projects using WHO’s health systems framework, India, 2014–2018
| Aspect of health systems framework | Retinopathy of prematurity pilot project | Diabetic retinopathy pilot project | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Activities envisaged | Outcomes achieved by March 2018 | Activities envisaged | Outcomes achieved by March 2018 | |
| Leadership and governance | (i) establish a national task force and state coordination committees to steer the project; (ii) establish technical expert groups for individual project components; and (iii) identify strategies for implementation | (i) national task force met 4 times; (ii) 9 state coordination committee meetings held; (iii) 22 technical expert group meetings held; and (iv) 4 meetings held between project management team and national health secretary | (i) establish a national task force and state and district coordination committees to steer the project; (ii) establish technical expert groups for individual project components; and (iii) identify strategies for implementation | (i) national task force met 5 times; (ii) 7 state coordination committee and 5 district coordination committee meetings held; (iii) 19 technical expert group meetings held; and (iv) 4 meetings held between project management team and national health secretary |
| Health workforce | (i) improve the capabilities of paediatricians, nurses, ophthalmologists and support personnel | (i) 21 ophthalmologists trained to screen for retinopathy of prematurity; (ii) 5 ophthalmologists trained in laser treatment; (iii) 21 paediatricians and 48 nurses trained in improving neonatal care and preventing retinopathy of prematurity; (iv) 19 nurse educators trained in improving the quality of neonatal care; and (v) staff in 16 district early intervention centres trained in improving neonatal care and reducing the risk retinopathy of prematurity | (i) improve the capabilities of physicians, ophthalmologists, ophthalmic assistants and primary health-care personnel | (i) 127 personnel trained in diabetic retinopathy screening; (ii) 27 ophthalmologists trained in laser treatment; (iii) 3 153 health support staff educated about diabetic retinopathy; (iv) 326 physicians educated about risk factors and early screening for diabetic retinopathy; and (v) e-learning modules developed for physicians |
| Service delivery | (i) identify 4 states each with 6 medical schools and 12 district hospital SNCUs suitable for participation; and (ii) establish infrastructure for the screening and treatment of retinopathy of prematurity | (i) 5 971 preterm infants screened; and (ii) 185 infants treated for retinopathy of prematurity | (i) identify 10 districts suitable for participation; (ii) establish infrastructure for screening and managing diabetes and its risk factors for complications at noncommunicable disease clinics; and (iii) augment facilities for managing diabetic retinopathy at the district level | (i) 34 550 people with diabetes screened for diabetic retinopathy; (ii) 1 601 people with diabetes treated for diabetic retinopathy; and (iii) 15 diabetes support groups established |
| Medical products and technologies | (i) provide all pilot district hospitals with an indirect ophthalmoscope for screening; (ii) provide 7 medical schools with laser treatment systems; and (iii) establish simulation laboratories for quality improvement training at mentoring institutions and state medical schools | (i) 14 indirect ophthalmoscopes, 6 Retcams, 8 laser treatment units, 22 Volk 20D diagnostic lenses, 8 Volk 30D diagnostic lenses, 1 pulse oximeter and 1 Heine Omega 500 digital video camera provided; and (ii) dedicated open access web site set up for online training: it included 126 short webinars and videos for training to improve the quality of neonatal care and focused on preterm care for doctors, nurses and support staff | (i) install fundus cameras for screening at noncommunicable disease clinics in community health centres; (ii) install laser treatment systems at district hospitals; (iii) provide optical coherence tomography equipment at tertiary care centres in the district; and (iv) establish systems for on-the-spot and remote reporting of fundus images | (i) 50 fundus cameras provided at noncommunicable disease clinics; (ii) 10 laser treatment systems installed at district hospitals; (iii) optical coherence tomography equipment installed at 6 tertiary care facilities; (iv) dedicated web site developed to support people with diabetes and their caregivers; and (v) telephone counselling helpline established for people with diabetes |
| Information systems and research | Develop software for retinopathy of prematurity project management that: (i) is integrated with the SNCU online database; (ii) can record details of all infants eligible for retinopathy of prematurity screening, including when they were screened and their treatment and follow-up; (iii) facilitates referral for treatment; and (iv) serves as a repository for advocacy and communication documentation developed by, and shared with, stakeholders | (i) software has been developed that can track all infants eligible for retinopathy of prematurity screening and their treatment and follow-up and that can be used for clinical monitoring; and (ii) 4 tablet computers provided | (i) develop software for project management; (ii) register details of people with diabetes on tablet computers located at primary and secondary health-care centres; and (iii) carry out operational research | (i) 40 tablet computers with dedicated patient-tracking software installed at community health centres in 10 pilot districts; and (ii) 10 operational research projects commissioned |
| Health-care financing | (i) provide free retinopathy of prematurity screening and treatment at public health facilities in project areas | (i) free retinopathy of prematurity screening established in 16 SNCUs; and (ii) treatment facilities provided at 6 medical schools and 1 district hospital | (i) provide free diabetic retinopathy screening and laser treatment at public health facilities in project areas; and (ii) provide free medication for managing diabetes and associated risk factors, such as hypertension | (i) free diabetic retinopathy screening established at 50 health facilities in 10 districts; and (ii) diabetic retinopathy treatment services augmented in 10 district hospitals, at no cost to patients |
| Access | (i) improve access to retinopathy of prematurity services in public health facilities in tier-2 cities (i.e. cities with a population of around 1 million and important regional hubs) and rural districts, which cover poor and rural populations | (i) need for poor parents to travel far for screening and to seek treatment in large cities reduced; and (ii) access to timely care provided | (i) register people with diabetes and carry out preliminary diabetic retinopathy screening at health centres in rural areas where such facilities were not previously available (these centres are predominantly used by women and poor people) | (i) 57.3% of people with diabetes screened were women; (ii) the need for people with diabetes to travel far for screening and treatment was reduced |
| Coverage | (i) screen all preterm infants admitted to SNCUs who are eligible for retinopathy of prematurity screening at the secondary care level in the public health system; and (ii) treat all infants with sight-threatening retinopathy of prematurity | ND | (i) include all registered people with diabetes seen at primary and secondary health-care centres in the public health system in project areas | ND |
| Quality | (i) monitor outcomes regularly; (ii) upgrade staff skills through personal and online training; and (iii) provide supportive supervision | ND | (i) monitor outcomes regularly; and (ii) upgrade staff skills through training | ND |
| Safety | (i) ensure the care provided is to an accepted standard | (i) operational safety guidelines were finalized and disseminated following consultations | (i) ensure the care provided is to an accepted standard | (i) national technical guidelines are being drafted |
ND: not determined; SNCU: sick newborn care unit; WHO: World Health Organization.