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Abstract #70525 Published in IGR 18-2

A review of 145 234 ophthalmic patient episodes lost to follow-up

Davis A; Baldwin A; Hingorani M; Dwyer A; Flanagan D
Eye 2017; 31: 422-429


PURPOSE: Lost to follow-up and delays in follow-up care are a major problem in chronic diseases, particularly when irreversible progression precedes symptoms. The NPSA Glaucoma Safety Alert in 2009 highlighted the risk and requirements for consistent robust review systems in ophthalmology. In response, Moorfields Eye Hospital reviewed the records of all patients in all subspecialties without review appointments booked. The purpose of this study was to determine whether ophthalmic patients lost to follow-up had come to harm and develop investigation techniques to optimise safety, which do not put excessive demands on clinical staff time. METHODS: The health records of all patients lost to follow-up (LTFU) between July 2007 and November 2012 were reviewed for evidence of clinical harm using a risk-based strategy involving an initial administrative review, then a clinician led electronic patient record review, followed by a review of paper records by clinicians. The final stage was a clinical outpatient review where required determined by clinical risk. RESULTS: Patients identified as lost to follow-up were 145 234; 79 562 episodes were closed following administrative review; 50 519 were discharged following clinician examination of paper records; 12 316 patients required clinical review; and 16 serious incidents were identified, of which 14 patients had glaucoma, 1 a medical retinal condition with secondary glaucoma, and 1 an oculoplastic condition. A number of actions implemented hospital wide are described which minimise future risk. CONCLUSION: Risk from delays or lost to follow-up care continue and require better capacity and more accurate data nationally.Eye advance online publication, 11 November 2016; doi:10.1038/eye.2016.225.

Moorfields Eye Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK.

Full article

Classification:

11.17 Cooperation with medical therapy e.g. persistency, compliance, adherence (Part of: 11 Medical treatment)
15 Miscellaneous



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