Teleophthalmology at a primary and tertiary eye care network from India: environmental and economic impact

Objective To evaluate the environmental and economic impact of teleophthalmological services provided by a primary (rural) and tertiary (urban) eyecare network in India. Methods This prospective study utilised a random sampling method, and administered an environmental and economic impact assessment...

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Veröffentlicht in:Eye (London) 2024-08, Vol.38 (11), p.2203-2208
Hauptverfasser: Rani, Padmaja Kumari, Khanna, Rohit C., Ravindrane, Ramyadevi, Yeleswarapu, Sarath Chandra, Panaganti, Anand Kumar, Thakur, Vishal Singh, Sharadi, Viresh, Iype, Varghese, Rathi, Varsha M., Vaddavalli, Pravin Krishna
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective To evaluate the environmental and economic impact of teleophthalmological services provided by a primary (rural) and tertiary (urban) eyecare network in India. Methods This prospective study utilised a random sampling method, and administered an environmental and economic impact assessment questionnaire. The study included 324 (primary: 173; tertiary: 151) patients who received teleconsultations from July to September 2022. The primary network (rural) used a colour-coded triage system (Green: eye conditions managed by teleconsult alone; yellow: semi-urgent referral within 1 week to a month, red: urgent referral within a day to a week). The tertiary network (urban) included new and follow-up patients. The environmental impact was assessed by estimating the potential CO 2 emissions saved by avoiding travel for various transport modes. Economic impact measured by the potential cost savings from direct (travel) and indirect (food and wages lost) expenses spent by yellow and red referrals (primary) and the first-visit expenses of follow-up (tertiary) patients. Results The primary rural network saved 2.89 kg CO 2 /person and 80 km/person. The tertiary urban network saved 176.6 kg CO 2 /person and 1666 km/person. The potential cost savings on travel expenses were INR 19,970 (USD 250) for the primary (average: INR 370 (USD 4.6) per patient) and INR 758,870 (USD 9486) for the tertiary network (average: INR 8339 (USD 104) per patient). Indirect cost savings (food and wages) were of INR 29,100 (USD 364) for the primary and INR 347,800 (USD 4347) for the tertiary network. Conclusion Teleophthalmology offers substantial environmental and economic benefits in rural and urban eyecare systems.
ISSN:0950-222X
1476-5454
1476-5454
DOI:10.1038/s41433-024-02934-4