| Literature DB >> 32656359 |
Anne X Nguyen1, Kalla A Gervasio2, Albert Y Wu3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Since the WHO declared the COVID-19 outbreak as a public health emergency, medical societies around the world published COVID-19 recommendations to physicians to ensure patient care and physician safety. During this pandemic, ophthalmologists around the world adapted their clinical and surgical practice following such guidelines. This original research examines all publicly available COVID-19 recommendations from twelve major ophthalmology societies around the world. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: Twelve ophthalmology societies recognised by the International Council of Ophthalmology were included in this study. One society per each WHO region was included: the society selected was the one who had the highest number of national COVID-19 confirmed cases on 11 May 2020. In addition to these countries, the major ophthalmology society in each G7 country was included.Entities:
Keywords: medical education; public health; telemedicine; treatment other
Year: 2020 PMID: 32656359 PMCID: PMC7342824 DOI: 10.1136/bmjophth-2020-000525
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open Ophthalmol ISSN: 2397-3269
Overview of international ophthalmology societies examined
| Society | Country | WHO region | # of members | COVID-19 portal page | COVID-19 resources | Updates |
| RCOphth | UK | Europe | 2,214 | Comprehensive list of resources for ophthalmologists (PPE guidance, clinical guidance, optometrist collaboration, telemedicine and information for trainees) written by RCOphth and list of references from other national entities for additional clinical guidance. | Frequent | |
| AAO | USA | Americas | 30,000 | Comprehensive list of news and resources for ophthalmologists in the USA and around the world (clinical, advocacy and policy, telemedicine, practice management, articles and outbreak statistics). | Daily | |
| COS | Canada | Americas | 854 | COVID-19 Practice Resource Centre with 23 resources: COS guidelines, subspecialty position statements, articles and videos from AAO, CDC, UHN and learning opportunities (webinars). | Frequent | |
| SEO | Spain | Europe | 2,955 | 5 detailed documents highlighting COVID-19 recommendations for ophthalmologists, for patients and for medical professionals concerning the distribution of medication related to COVID-19. | None | |
| SFO | France | Europe | 5,580 | 17 detailed recommendation sheets written by SFO, often in collaboration with other vision-related French organisations. | Frequent | |
| DOG | Germany | Europe | 7,200 | 1 COVID-19 handbook in collaboration with the Professional Association of German Ophthalmologists eV. Referral to external resources on COVID-19: list of recommendations for medical professionals, guidelines from other ophthalmic societies and general information on the pandemic. | None | |
| SOI | Italy | Europe | 4,527 | 17 press releases from SOI President, concerning issues surrounding contact lenses, legal doctors, provision of FFP2 masks and patient care. | Variable | |
| JOS | Japan | Western Pacific | 14,686 | 11 notices concerning COVID-19 tailored for ophthalmologists and citizens, as well as a list of reputable sources of information concerning the pandemic (WHO, CDC, Lancet and AAO). | Variable | |
| AIOS | India | Southeast Asia | 19,846 | 1 COVID-19 alert page: general information on COVID-19, frequently asked questions section, webinars, in addition to the list of external recommendations (AAO COVID-19 updates, India’s latest COVID-19 statistics and global updates). | Not frequent | |
| OSSA | South Africa | Africa | 233 | 2-page statement on management of ophthalmic patients during COVID-19, and referral to OSSA the COVID-19 Coronavirus South African Resource Portal produced by the country’s department of health. | None | |
| IRSO | Iran | Eastern Mediterranean | 1,760 | No COVID-19 information available. | ||
| CHOS | China | Western Pacific | 22,000 | No COVID-19 information available. | ||
RCOphth: The Royal College of Ophthalmologists (https://www.rcophth.ac.uk/).
AAO: American Academy of Ophthalmology (https://www.aao.org/).
COS: Canadian Ophthalmological Society (https://www.cosprc.ca/).
SEO: Sociedad Española de Oftalmología/Spanish Society of Ophthalmology (https://www.oftalmoseo.com/).
SFO: Société Française d’Ophthalmologie/French Society of Ophthalmology (https://www.sfo-online.fr/).
DOG: Deutsche Ophthalmologische Gesselschaft/German Ophthalmological Society (https://www.dog.org/).
SOI: Società Oftalmologica Italiana/Italian Ophthalmological Society (https://www.sedesoi.com/).
JOS: Japanese Ophthalmological Society (http://www.nichigan.or.jp/).
AIOS: All India Ophthalmological Society (https://aios.org/).
OSSA: Ophthalmological Society of South Africa (https://www.ossa.co.za/).
IRSO: Iranian Society of Ophthalmology (http://www.irso.org/).
CHOS: Chinese Ophthalmological Society (https://www.apaophth.org/chinese-ophthalmological-society/ and http://www.cma.org.cn/).
Figure 1Timeline of the first COVID-19 recommendation published by major international ophthalmology societies and number of COVID-19 confirmed cases per country. Figure 1 uses the logos of ophthalmology societies and is illustrated by coauthor AX-LN.
Summary of recommendations on urgent care for ophthalmologists during the COVID-19 pandemic per international ophthalmology society
| Society | Examples of urgent treatments |
| RCOphth | Glaucoma (acute, uncontrolled or rapidly progressive). Wet active age-related macular degeneration. Sight threatening treatable retinovascular disease. Acute retinal detachments. Severe active uveitis. Ocular and adnexal oncology – active, aggressive, uncontrolled or untreated lesions. Retinopathy of prematurity. Endophthalmitis. Sight-threatening trauma. Sight-threatening orbital disease (orbital cellulitis and severe thyroid eye disease). Giant cell arteritis affecting vision. |
Acute chemical injury or acute Stevens Johnson syndrome. Acute lens complications. Appositional choroidal effusion, suprachoroidal haemorrhage or flat anterior chamber. Bleb leaks, wound leaks, overfiltration, underfiltration, bleb scarring or shallow anterior chamber. Complications with implanted devices in the cornea or anterior segment. Congenital cataract in the amblyopic period, monocular patients with documented vision loss precluding driving, reading or self-care, lens-induced glaucoma, angle-closure glaucoma, acute lens complications or severe anisometropia of fellow eye post recent lens extraction in first eye. Dacryocystocele. Displaced facial bone fractures. Endophthalmitis, corneal touch, corneal decompensation or exposed plate. Glaucoma when uncontrolled or absolute with a blind and painful eye, or when catastrophic or rapidly progressive. Haemodynamic instability or oculocardiac reflex. Impending corneal compromise. Implant/tube exposure that might be sight threatening, endophthalmitis, malpositioned tube endangering eye or excessive inflammation, a tube that might worsen vision due to corneal oedema or iritis or cystoid macular oedema or with a severe tube malposition causing rapid visual loss. Injury or trauma to the canaliculus, cornea or sclera. Intraocular malignancy. Lacerations of eyelid or face. Lacerations, blunt rupture or deeply embedded corneal foreign body. Lens-induced glaucoma or angle-closure glaucoma. Life-threatening or sight-threatening conditions (ie, congenital ptosis, hypotony due to trauma, infection, intractable pain, hyphaemia, progressive vision loss, uncontrolled intraocular pressure, suspected tumour or malignancy). Neonate with obstructive respiratory compromise. Ocular trauma, infection, intractable glaucoma, globe perforation, intractable pain or intraocular malignancy. Orbital cellulitis. Orbital tumour with impending vision loss. Pain due to ocular diseases causing significant compromise of quality of life. Paediatric patients with: retinoblastoma, endophthalmitis, Coats disease, uveitis, glaucoma, ocular trauma, retinal detachment, presumed intraocular foreign body, corneal blindness in both eyes in their amblyopic period or retinopathy of prematurity. Presumed intraocular foreign body. Proliferative diabetic retinopathy, proliferative vitreoretinopathy, complex preretinal membrane or complex macular pathology. Retinal detachment, ocular trauma, intraocular infection, vitreous haemorrhage, retinal tear, intraocular foreign body, misdirected aqueous, ciliary block glaucoma, malignant glaucoma, a vitreous prolapse or a tube shunt that blocks filtration. Suspected giant cell arteritis. Torn or lost extraocular muscle. Wound dehiscence or other wounds, including dislocated LASIK flaps. | |
| COS | Macula-threatening retinal detachment. Postoperative hypotony. |
| SEO | More than 60 examples of urgent cases inspired from the Moorfields Eye Hospital National Health Service Foundation Trust and more than 40 urgent procedures inspired from the American Academy of Ophthalmology. |
| SFO | Wound of the globe with or without an intraocular foreign body. Retinal detachments of less than 1 month’s duration. Retained lens material. Acute endophthalmitis with decreased vision. Removal of non-absorbable synthetic implants resistant to antibiotic treatment. |
| DOG | Referral to AAO website and other resources. |
| SOI | Acute glaucoma patients. |
| JOS | Diseases leading to blindness or complications: retinal detachment, bulging cataracts and retinopathy of prematurity. Malignant tumours: retinoblastoma, malignant melanoma, squamous cell carcinoma and orbital tumour. Ocular trauma: corneal perforation, conjunctival laceration, ocular rupture, orbital fracture, intraocular foreign body, intraocular foreign body, corneal foreign body, corneal foreign body and traumatic flap detachment after LASIK surgery. Infectious diseases: postoperative intraocular inflammation, eyelid abscess, lacrimal sac inflammation and intraocular inflammation associated with filtration vesicle infection. Glaucoma: paediatric glaucoma, rapidly progressing glaucoma and lens-derived glaucoma. Other: corneal transplants, congenital cataracts requiring amblyopia treatment, traumatic cataracts, important ophthalmic surgery and intravitreal injections. |
| AIOS | Chemical injuries. Blunt trauma or perforating injuries. Open globe injuries with or without foreign body. Lid trauma. Angle closure glaucoma. Neovascular glaucoma. Elevated intraocular pressure >38 mm Hg. History of recent onset sudden vision loss (<2 weeks) – central retinal artery occlusion (CRAO), central retinal vein occlusion (CRVO), vitreous hemorhage (VH), retinal detachment. Retinal tears. Endophthalmis. Expulsive choroidal haemorrhage. Exposed infected buckle. Orbital cases with vision loss. Severe inflammation – lid/orbit. Tumour cases with vision loss. Corneal abrasion/superficial foreign body (including contact lens lost in eye)/ulcer. Postoperative follow-up. Patients requiring intravitreal injections with fresh bleed or those requiring for endophthalmitis. One eyed patients on anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) with sudden loss of vision. |
| OSSA | No examples provided. |
| IRSO | No COVID-19 information available. |
| CHOS | No COVID-19 information available. |
RCOphth: The Royal College of Ophthalmologists (https://www.rcophth.ac.uk/).
AAO: American Academy of Ophthalmology (https://www.aao.org/).
COS: Canadian Ophthalmological Society (https://www.cosprc.ca/).
SEO: Sociedad Española de Oftalmología/Spanish Society of Ophthalmology (https://www.oftalmoseo.com/).
SFO: Société Française d’Ophthalmologie/French Society of Ophthalmology (https://www.sfo-online.fr/).
DOG: Deutsche Ophthalmologische Gesselschaft/German Ophthalmological Society (https://www.dog.org/).
SOI: Società Oftalmologica Italiana/Italian Ophthalmological Society (https://www.sedesoi.com/).
JOS: Japanese Ophthalmological Society (http://www.nichigan.or.jp/).
AIOS: All India Ophthalmological Society (https://aios.org/).
OSSA: Ophthalmological Society of South Africa (https://www.ossa.co.za/).
IRSO: Iranian Society of Ophthalmology (http://www.irso.org/).
CHOS: Chinese Ophthalmological Society (https://www.apaophth.org/chinese-ophthalmological-society/ and http://www.cma.org.cn/).
Summary of telemedicine resources for ophthalmologists during the COVID-19 pandemic per international ophthalmology society
| Society | Examples of telemedicine resources |
| RCOphth | Recommended Telemedicine Options for Ophthalmology Consultations. Norfolk and Norwich Hospital (NNUH) use of telemedicine during COVID-19. |
| AAO | Recommended Telehealth Resources: Tips to Help Your Practice Succeed. Teleophthalmology: How to Get Started. Coding for Phone Calls, Internet and Telehealth Consultations. COVID-19 Moves Telemedicine to the Forefront. Academy, Federal Agencies Issue New Telehealth Guidance for COVID-19. |
| COS | Recommended |
| SEO | Telematics (voice call and video call) recommended. |
| SFO | Telephone calls recommended. |
| DOG | Recommended |
| SOI | Recommended. |
| JOS | Not indicated. |
| AIOS | Recommended Live Webinar: Telemedicine in Ophthalmology – Current Platforms. AIOS Telemedicine Practice Guidelines. |
| OSSA | Not indicated. |
| IRSO | No COVID-19 information available. |
| CHOS | No COVID-19 information available. |
RCOphth: The Royal College of Ophthalmologists (https://www.rcophth.ac.uk/).
AAO: American Academy of Ophthalmology (https://www.aao.org/).
COS: Canadian Ophthalmological Society (https://www.cosprc.ca/).
SEO: Sociedad Española de Oftalmología/Spanish Society of Ophthalmology (https://www.oftalmoseo.com/).
SFO: Société Française d’Ophthalmologie/French Society of Ophthalmology (https://www.sfo-online.fr/).
DOG: Deutsche Ophthalmologische Gesselschaft/German Ophthalmological Society (https://www.dog.org/).
SOI: Società Oftalmologica Italiana/Italian Ophthalmological Society (https://www.sedesoi.com/).
JOS: Japanese Ophthalmological Society (http://www.nichigan.or.jp/).
AIOS: All India Ophthalmological Society (https://aios.org/).
OSSA: Ophthalmological Society of South Africa (https://www.ossa.co.za/).
IRSO: Iranian Society of Ophthalmology (http://www.irso.org/).
CHOS: Chinese Ophthalmological Society (https://www.apaophth.org/chinese-ophthalmological-society/ and http://www.cma.org.cn/).
Summary of hygiene, PPE and safety recommendations for ophthalmologists during the COVID-19 pandemic per international ophthalmology society
| Society | Recommendations on | |||||
| Hand hygiene and | Slit-lamp shields | Single-use gloves | Masks | Other | Safety distance between patients | |
| RCOphth | Yes | Yes | Yes | Fluid-resistant type IIR surgical mask. | Filtering face piece respirator. Eye or face protection. Disposable plastic apron. Disposable fluid-resistant gown. | NA |
| AAO | Yes | Referral to the CDC: Standard Precautions page, where hand hygiene, cough etiquette, PPE use and surface disinfection are described. AAO notes that the use of PPE varies from one institution to another and must be dealt on a case-by-case basis, as there are worldwide shortages of PPE. | ||||
| COS | Yes | Yes | Yes | Fitted N95 (best prevention). Surgical mask (if N95 not available and for routine care). | Face shield. Goggles or other eye protection. Single-use applanation tips and drops. | NA |
| SEO | Yes | Yes | Yes | FFP2 (N95) or FFP3 masks. | Protective eyewear. Pinholes use discouraged. | 1 m |
| SFO | Yes | Not indicated | Yes | FFP2 mask. Surgical mask (if FFP2 mask not available). | Goggles. Surgical gown or plastic apron. Shoe protectors. | 1 m |
| DOG | Yes | Not indicated | Yes | Respiratory mask. Surgical mask (if respiratory mask not available). | NA | 2 m |
| SOI | Yes | Not indicated | Yes | FFP2 mask. Surgical mask (if FFP2 mask not available). | Goggles. | NA |
| JOS | Yes | Not indicated | Yes | Recommended. | Face shield. Goggles or other eye protection. Apron. Caps. Gowns. Shoe covers. | NA |
| AIOS | Yes | Yes | Yes | Triple layered/N95 masks if available. | Goggles or face shields. Disposable gowns. | 1 m |
| OSSA | Yes | Not indicated | Yes | Face masks. | Aprons. | NA |
| IRSO | No COVID-19 information available. | |||||
| CHOS | No COVID-19 information available. | |||||
RCOphth: The Royal College of Ophthalmologists (https://www.rcophth.ac.uk/).
AAO: American Academy of Ophthalmology (https://www.aao.org/).
COS: Canadian Ophthalmological Society (https://www.cosprc.ca/).
SEO: Sociedad Española de Oftalmología/Spanish Society of Ophthalmology (https://www.oftalmoseo.com/).
SFO: Société Française d’Ophthalmologie/French Society of Ophthalmology (https://www.sfo-online.fr/).
DOG: Deutsche Ophthalmologische Gesselschaft/German Ophthalmological Society (https://www.dog.org/).
SOI: Società Oftalmologica Italiana/Italian Ophthalmological Society(https://www.sedesoi.com/)
JOS: Japanese Ophthalmological Society (http://www.nichigan.or.jp/).
AIOS: All India Ophthalmological Society (https://aios.org/).
OSSA: Ophthalmological Society of South Africa (https://www.ossa.co.za/).
IRSO: Iranian Society of Ophthalmology (http://www.irso.org/).
CHOS: Chinese Ophthalmological Society (https://www.apaophth.org/chinese-ophthalmological-society/ and http://www.cma.org.cn/).
PPE, personal protective equipment.