| Literature DB >> 32546938 |
Winfried Amoaku1, Clare Bailey2, Louise Downey3, Richard P Gale4, Faruque Ghanchi5, Robin Hamilton6, Sajjad Mahmood7, Geeta Menon8, Jenny Nosek9, Ian Pearce10, Yit Yang11.
Abstract
An aging population leads to increasing demand for medical retina services with chronic diseases being managed in long-term care pathways. Many hospital services struggle to deliver efficient and effective MR care due, at least in part, to infrastructure that does not expand responsively enough to meet the increased demand. A steering committee of retinal specialists from a variety of UK NHS hospital ophthalmology departments with experience of leading and managing NHS retinal services in the intravitreal era came together for the generation of this document to review and compile key aspects that should be considered when optimising intravitreal treatment capacity within MR services. This article aims to provide a useful collation and signposting of key published evidence, consensus and insights on aspects of delivering an intravitreal service, including treatment regimens, virtual clinics, staff training and governance, telemedicine and information technology, and data collection and key performance indicators. The objective is to equip ophthalmologic healthcare professionals with the necessary tools to develop and adapt their local service in the face of current and projected increased demand.Entities:
Keywords: capacity; intravitreal service; nAMD; resources
Year: 2020 PMID: 32546938 PMCID: PMC7239611 DOI: 10.2147/OPTH.S233061
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Ophthalmol ISSN: 1177-5467
Points to Consider for Effective Virtual Clinics; a Consensus View Based on the Experience of All Members of the Working Group
| Redesign of Invitation-To-Appointment Letters | Patient Outcome Letters | Patient Information Leaflets | Nurse/Technician Triage for Comorbidities in Virtual Data Collection Clinics | Clarification of Management Practice and Key Performance Indicators |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Explain to patients that an update of diagnosis may not be given on the date of attendance at a virtual clinic - specialists will review the data and then plan the next appointment. | May facilitate service tariffs (ie claiming reimbursement for virtual assessments). | Traditionally given out at baseline in most patient pathways. | Helps to pick up problems that could impact on treatment, such as recent cerebrovascular accident (CVA) or ocular infection. | Virtual clinic staff are often re-deployed to face-to-face services to cover sick leave or peaks in activity. |
A Delegated HCP Should Be Provided with Practical Training on
Preparation for injections |
Aseptic technique, including cleaning the eye |
Draping of patient |
Insertion of eye speculum (directly observed) |
Safety checks prior to injection |
Drawing up injection |
Marking injection site |
Delivery of injection |
Post-injection checks |
Management of untoward incidents (eg paracentesis) |
Enclosed; Dedicated to deal with clean (non-infected) cases; Free from interruption Sufficient size to accommodate a patient couch or recliner chair Allow staff access both sides of the head Facilities for hand washing The ceiling should be non-particulate and floors washable Good illumination in the room and injection field must be good Ventilation, at least 10 air changes/hour. If less than this local risk assessment advised |
| Scrubs | There is no evidence that scrubs reduce surgical site infection (SSIs). However, since the injector is required to perform a surgical scrub before IVT, wearing scrubs may be preferable to a plastic apron. |
| Sterile gloves | The injector must carry out a full decontamination hand scrub before performing IVT |
| Caps | Wearing head cover is useful in keeping small amounts of hair or airborne bacteria away from the operative site. |
| Masks | Publications from the US and RCOphth guidance recommend that masks are worn by the injector, since their face is quite close to the operative field and a greater proportion of bacterial growth from endophthalmitis cases due to intravitreal injections appear to consist of oral flora. |