1. Improving Access to Eye Care in Rural Communities: PocDoc's Web-Based Visual Acuity Screening Tool.
- Author
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Sah, Shreya, Liu, Renee, Lai, HaoXing, Agrawal, Mahek, Jain, Priyanka, Agashe, Prathamesh, Gupta, Akshita, Madhan, Pranay, Chauhan, Ritika, Chourasiya, Kalpana, Bansod, Samiksha, Suman, Singh, Gaganpreet, Sule, Ashita, Singh, Jayanti, Puah, Marilyn, Boon, Joewee, Rojas-Carabali, William, Sen, Pradnya, and Lee, Bernett
- Subjects
EYE care ,VISUAL acuity ,RURAL health services ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,RURAL population ,VISION testing - Abstract
Objective:Visual acuity (VA) testing is crucial for early intervention in cases of visual impairment, especially in rural health care. This study aimed to determine the potential of a web-based VA test (PocDoc) in addressing the unique health care needs of rural areas through the comparison in its effectiveness against the conventional VA test in identifying visual impairment among an Indian rural population. Methods:Prospective comparative study conducted in December 2022 at a tertiary referral eye care center in central India. We evaluated all patients with the PocDoc VA tests using three device types, and the conventional VA test. Bland–Altman plot (BAP) compared PocDoc and conventional VA tests. Fisher's exact tests evaluated associations between categorical parameters. Kruskal–Wallis tests followed by post hoc Dunn's tests identified association between categorical parameters and numerical parameters. Results:We evaluated 428 patients (792 measurements of VA) with mean age 36.7 (±23.3) years. PocDoc resulted in slightly worse VA scores (mean logMAR: 0.345) than conventional (mean logMAR: 0.315). Correlation coefficient between the conventional and PocDoc logMAR VA values was rho = 0.845 and rho2 = 0.7133 (p = 6.617 × 10
–215 ; adjusted p = 2.205 × 10–214 ). Most data points fell within the interchangeable range of ±0.32 on BAP. Difference between the two methods increased with higher logMAR values, indicating poorer agreement for worse VA scores. Conclusions:Identifying and addressing the unique health care needs of rural populations is critical, including access to appropriate and effective VA testing methods. Validating and improving VA testing methods can ensure early intervention and improve the quality of life for individuals with visual impairment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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