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Longtime AOA volunteer, profession luminary diesFrank Fontana O.D., received the AOA President’s Award for a lifetime of...
11/10/2021

Longtime AOA volunteer, profession luminary dies

Frank Fontana O.D., received the AOA President’s Award for a lifetime of distinguished service to the profession in October 2017. From left, Ronald L. Benner, O.D., AOA trustee, Dr. Fontana, Samuel D. Pierce, O.D., AOA president, and Andy Mackner, O.D., AOSA immediate past president.

It is with great sadness that the AOA notes the passing of Frank Fontana, O.D., 96, on Oct. 3, 2018. A longtime AOA volunteer and optometric luminary, Dr. Fontana—affectionately known as “Uncle Frank” by friends and colleagues—is remembered for his enduring enthusiasm and passion for a profession he helped shape across nearly seven decades.

A St. Louis, Missouri, native, Dr. Fontana was drafted into the U.S. Army in 1943 and became a supply sergeant in a medical battalion during World War II. Decorated for his actions in Europe, Dr. Fontana would use his GI Bill to graduate from Illinois College of Optometry in 1949. Only a year later, Dr. Fontana would open his practice in St. Louis and specialize in contact lenses.

A pioneer in the field, Dr. Fontana published countless articles and clinical investigations related to contact lenses, in addition to consulting and lecturing on the topic throughout his career. He was named chair of AOA’s then-Contact Lens Committee in 1979 and was co-founder of AOA’s Contact Lens Section before chairing the section in 1983.

An active volunteer in his local optometric society, the Missouri Optometric Association and AOA, Dr. Fontana served on AOA’s Communications Committee and joined the Optometry’s Meeting® Exhibit Committee in 1999, serving there for over a decade.

His extensive expertise earned him editorial positions with many trade publications, as well as adjunct teaching and researcher positions at both the University of Missouri-St. Louis College of Optometry and Washington University School of Medicine.

Inducted into the National Optometry Hall of Fame in 2012, Dr. Fontana was awarded the AOA Contact Lens and Cornea Section (CLCS) Legend Award, the AOA Contact Lens Section Man of the Year Achievement, and countless other industry recognitions throughout his career. Additionally, Dr. Fontana was awarded the AOA President’s Award for a lifetime of distinguished service to the profession in October 2017.

In remembering Dr. Fontana, Sean Mulqueeny, O.D., recalls not only an optometric forerunner in contact lenses, but also a personal mentor and friend. Dr. Mulqueeny says no single individual had a greater impact on his career than Dr. Fontana—and likely innumerable others can say the same.

“Frank Fontana’s contributions to optometry are immeasurable,” Dr. Mulqueeny says. “His impact clinically, in research and as a political advocate were instrumental in shaping the profession as we know it today.”

A foundation of many groups, meetings or collaborations, Dr. Fontana left his mark on the profession and it’s one of those circumstances in the 1980s that epitomizes him, Dr. Mulqueeny says. In creating a collaborative think tank with local ophthalmologists and doctors of optometrys, called the MD-OD Contact Lens Foundation of St. Louis, Dr. Fontana established a collegial group—that continues to this day—where ideas are freely shared among professions.

“The formation of such a group never would have happened without Frank’s leadership, humble demeanor and infectious personality,” Dr. Mulqueeny says. “Frank’s legacy will live on and his career is one that has helped set the standard for all of us.”

Adds Edward Bennett, O.D., past chair of AOA CLCS: “Frank Fontana was a true contact lens pioneer, a legendary positive force in communicating the importance of contact lens applications and benefits, and a very deserving member of the National Optometry Hall of Fame. Just as important, he deeply impacted every person he met; they were all greeted with a smile, with very encouraging words and always left feeling better about themselves.”

That was the case with Carmen Castellano, O.D., who first met Dr. Fontana in the mid-70s prior to entering optometry school. In the same vein as many others, Dr. Fontana quickly became a professional mentor and friend whose amiable knack left as much a mark on the profession as did his formidable contributions.

“Frank’s contributions to our field are formidable and well-documented,” Dr. Castellano says. “Although his greatest asset was his people skills. Frank knew everybody and everybody knew ‘Uncle Frank.’ He had a gift of remembering details about everyone he knew, and he was legendary for being able to tell you the names and ages of the children of people he knew throughout the industry. He loved optometry like few others, and optometry will miss Frank Fontana.”

Ronald L. Hopping, O.D., AOA’s 91st president, says, “Frank Fontana was loved by many across the country. He was always friendly, inquisitive and he served our profession well not only as a contact lens pioneer, but also as a positive goodwill ambassador.”

A viewing is scheduled for 3-8 p.m., Friday, Oct. 12, with a memorial service scheduled for 10 a.m., Saturday, Oct. 13, at the Schrader Funeral Home in Ballwin, Missouri, while a Celebration of Life service is being planned for 2019.

News Longtime AOA volunteer, profession luminary dies Byadmin November 10, 2021 Frank Fontana O.D., received the AOA President’s Award for a lifetime of distinguished service to the profession in October 2017. From left, Ronald L. Benner, O.D., AOA trustee, Dr. Fontana, Samuel D. Pierce, O.D., AOA...

Covering the bases: How to start a sports vision practiceExcerpted from page 14 of the September 2018 edition of AOA Foc...
11/10/2021

Covering the bases: How to start a sports vision practice

Excerpted from page 14 of the September 2018 edition of AOA Focus.

Doctors of optometry who manage sports-vision practices are often asked this one question: Where do you start? All-star doctors share their advice.

Wait for your pitch

Doctors of optometry should first do their homework, experts say.

“What needs are in your area?” asks Fraser Horn, O.D., a member of the AOA’s Sports and Performance Vision (SPV) Committee, associate dean of academic programs at Pacific University College of Optometry in Forest Grove, Oregon, and consultant for amateur and professional sports teams.

“If there is a sport or athletic activity that is popular in your area, get to know more about that sport and those involved. Do your homework on what opportunities may be in your own backyard.”

Amanda Nanasy, O.D., chair of the SPV Committee and team doctor of optometry for the NFL’s Miami Dolphins and the University of Central Florida Knights, agrees.

“The sport you offer services in at ­first could be one that many of your everyday patients participate in, such as golf or tennis,” she says. “You also might want to consider offering community-based eye care with teams at your local high school, Little Leagues or intramural teams. Not all schools have an athletic trainer, and doctors of optometry can help educate these athletes about the value of comprehensive eye exams or the symptoms of sustaining concussions in competition. You don’t have to work with professional or even collegiate teams to have a very strong sports-vision presence in your community. These are all great opportunities to get some experience under your belt as well as really make a difference.”

Know the ground rules

Analyze the visual demands of a sport, which can vary by the game. For instance, the athletic demands in golf are different than they are for motocross.

“This is not limited to visual acuity and contrast, but how vision integrates within neural processing, decision-making and vision-led movement-eye-hand reaction time, for example,” Dr. Horn says.

Also consider how you communicate with athletes. For instance, never use the word “fail.” Rather, Dr. Horn says, it’s best for doctors of optometry to say, “you’ve discovered an opportunity” to improve their visual skills, which may potentially enhance their athletic performance.

“This may seem silly, but the confidence of athletes is critical for their performance, and we can help them maintain their confidence by how we communicate with them,” he says.

And when athletes ask about their mechanics, Dr. Horn says, “don’t be afraid to defer to their coaches.”

Back up your advertising

Before you even start marketing your sports-vision services, Dr. Horn says, make sure you can deliver on those services.

“Primary care practices can easily provide services for improved visual acuity and contrast sensitivity through proper-fitting contact lenses or glasses, sport-specific sunglasses or protective eyewear,” Dr. Horn says.

Depending on your investment, doctors of optometry can offer so much more, he adds. Still, doctors of optometry shouldn’t oversell that techniques will guarantee success on the field, Dr. Horn says. Instead, he says, tell athletes that you can improve their visual skills, which may result in better on-field performance.

Tackle technology

After settling into their stance, doctors of optometry may want to make a greater financial investment in technology.

“The basic low-tech devices such as the Brock String, accommodation charts and fixation sticks are found now outside of optometry, so we have already begun to lose that scope of care,” says Keith Smithson, O.D., SPV Committee member and team doctor of optometry for several Washington, D.C.-area professional sports teams. “So, investment is now a must, in my opinion. The basic devices can still be used by doctors of optometry to begin their practice, gain experience in foundational vision testing and training concepts and can also be used in the proposed community sports-vision evaluations. But eventually, to be competitive, they might consider purchasing more advanced technologies—automated computerized technologies, such as eye-tracking systems.”

Access resources from the SPV Committee, join the SPV Advocacy Network and learn how you can list your practice’s emphasis on sports vision in the AOA’s Find a Doctor Locator.

News Covering the bases: How to start a sports vision practice Byadmin November 10, 2021 Excerpted from page 14 of the September 2018 edition of AOA Focus. Doctors of optometry who manage sports-vision practices are often asked this one question: Where do you start? All-star doctors share their advi...

Help patients see the light when driving at nightNov. 4, 2018, marks the official end of Daylight Saving Time. But by no...
11/10/2021

Help patients see the light when driving at night

Nov. 4, 2018, marks the official end of Daylight Saving Time. But by now drivers have already noticed the shrinking sunlight during their commutes.

The shorter daylight hours can exacerbate existing eye conditions and expose undiagnosed vision problems. Although the days have been getting shorter for months, the end of daylight saving time presents an opportunity for doctors of optometry to reinforce the essentialness of eye care.

“One of the No. 1 complaints from patients that we have in our offices is difficulty driving at night,” says Sue Lowe, O.D., chair of the AOA’s Health Promotions Committee.

That’s what prompted the committee to team up with Karl Citek, O.D., Ph.D., member of the AOA Commission on Ophthalmic Standards, on a tool doctors can use to educate patients on the hazards of driving at night—and what patients can do about them—”Vision Tips for Safe Driving at Night.”

Night vision

As the days grow shorter, patients report distracting glares, not only from the sun, but also from the headlights (high-intensity discharge and light-emitting diode lamps) of oncoming cars. Patients with glaucoma and cataracts are especially sensitive. A possible diagnosis is night myopia. At night, the pupil’s size increases, allowing for more aberrations from uncorrected prescriptions (for glasses and/or contact lenses) due to unfocused or scattered light rays. Then there are environmental factors, brought on by heaters (in office settings or vehicles), and stronger, outdoor wind currents that can cause low humidity and lead to dry eye.

Turning our clocks back means that commuters will find themselves driving to and from work in less light. Seeing their eye doctor is encouraged when patients have concerns about driving safely at night or in challenging conditions.

“Many patients, especially those with early cataracts, complain of difficulty seeing in low light or dim conditions, such as driving at night or in foggy, stormy weather,” Dr. Citek says. “Unfortunately, a new pair of glasses will not bring relief, especially not ones that are tinted.

“Doctors of optometry can counsel these patients about viable options, including referral for surgery and strategies to use prior to surgery,” he says. “For all patients, knowing what to do in bad weather or when an oncoming vehicle has very bright headlights is equally important,” he adds.

The AOA fact sheet offers more than 20 tips for patients so they can navigate the roadways more safely, including:

Never look directly at an oncoming vehicle, regardless of the type of headlights it has.

Clean a dirty, streaked or fogged windshield, outside and inside, to reduce glare and increase visibility.

Replace windshield wipers as necessary.

Turn off inside lights and turn down dashboard lights to the minimum level to cut down on glare from lights that you are not looking at or toward.

Consider prescription eyeglass lenses with anti-reflection coating to minimize distracting light from car dashboards, street lamps and other vehicles.

“These suggestions and recommendations are integrated with research and successful recommendations and tips,” Dr. Lowe says. “We hope to provide the optometrist with communication points for their patients to improve their driving at night as well as confirming their eyes are healthy and they have up-to-date vision correction.

“Also, with the new headlights as well as the new street lights, we wanted to make the public and doctors aware of some of the lighting changes in cities and on the cars themselves that have taken place over the past 10 years,” she adds. “No other health profession knows more about light than optometry.”

AOA resources

View the Night Vision fact sheet.
View a case study on vision and driving on the AOA Ethics Forum.

News Help patients see the light when driving at night Byadmin November 9, 2021 Nov. 4, 2018, marks the official end of Daylight Saving Time. But by now drivers have already noticed the shrinking sunlight during their commutes. The shorter daylight hours can exacerbate existing eye conditions and ex...

The computer will see you now: AI technology produces mixed resultsArtificial intelligence (AI) produced a mixed bag of ...
11/09/2021

The computer will see you now: AI technology produces mixed results

Artificial intelligence (AI) produced a mixed bag of results when screening diabetic retinopathy in a “real-world” clinical setting, researchers say, setting expectations for autonomous grading systems.

Published online in JAMA Network Open, the Australian study described cautious promise for AI-based grading of diabetic retinopathy and subsequent specialist referral after the technology correctly identified a pair of severe disease cases but also misclassified 15 false positives. The study comes at a time when U.S. federal regulators are beginning to clear the way for integrating AI systems into health care, with diabetic retinopathy screening at the forefront.

Diabetic retinopathy, a progressive retinal disease, is the most common cause of vision loss among people with diabetes and a leading cause of blindness among working-age adults. The result of uncontrolled swelling in the retina from leaking blood vessels, diabetic retinopathy can often go unnoticed by patients until vision loss occurs. That’s why early detection and intervention through regular, comprehensive eye exams can reduce the risk of blindness by 95%.

Likewise, it’s also why some look to AI with potential as another screening option. But enthusiasm surrounding AI isn’t the same as demonstrated performance, which is what researchers set out to determine in this most recent study.

According to the study, researchers trained nurses at a primary care practice to use tele-retinal AI screening software in conjunction with a color fundus camera over the course of six months. That system would take 1-3 macula-centered images per eye in about 10-15 minutes before taking another 3 minutes for the AI to generate a grade.

Overall, the AI system screened and graded 193 patients and those results were compared to an ophthalmologist’s review. While the ophthalmologist noted 183 patients with no signs of retinopathy, 8 with non-proliferative diabetic retinopathy (NPDR) and 2 with clinically significant diabetic retinopathy, the AI system identified 176 patients with no signs of retinopathy and 17 patients with clinically significant diabetic retinopathy. Although the AI classified all 8 mild diabetic retinopathy cases correctly, and the 2 clinically significant diabetic retinopathy patients, the system classified 15 false positives.

Researchers attribute these false positives to poor image quality and drusen similar in appearance to exudates or sheen reflections around the optic disc, the papillomacular area and the macula, for a positive predictive value of just 12%.

“Our evaluation demonstrates both the promise and challenges of using AI systems to identify (diabetic retinopathy) in clinical practice,” the authors note. “Evaluations of AI systems should be conducted in real-world clinical practice before they are deployed widely.”

AI devices becoming a norm?

In April, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved an AI device, called IDx-DR, that analyzes retinal images and provides “a screening decision without the need for a clinician to also interpret images or results.” If those images are of sufficient quality for grading, IDx-DR reportedly can detect mild diabetic retinopathy or more and refer those patients to an eye care professional.

That same month, FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb noted at the Health Datapalooza in Washington, D.C., that the FDA is working toward updated regulatory framework to keep up with technology. He even went as far as saying, ” we expect to see an increasing number of AI-based submissions in the coming years, starting with medical imaging devices, and we’re working with experts in the field,” quoted The Hill.

Paul Barney, O.D., AOA New Technology Committee chair, has followed the progression of AI screening devices for diabetic retinopathy and sees a “good fit” for such technology triaging diabetic patients into eye care. Comments such as Gottlieb’s only firms Dr. Barney’s opinion that AI technology in eye care will progressively develop over the next few years.

“Artificial intelligence-based technology is coming, and it will find a place in eye care,” Dr. Barney notes. “Doctors of optometry should try to embrace this technology as it develops and, if possible, incorporate it into their practice.”

Devices intended specifically for a primary medical office setting, such as the AI technology reviewed in the JAMA study, do present some unique challenges, including the high false-positive turnout noted by the study. In that case, doctors of optometry might avail themselves to such practices by reviewing images prior to specialist referral to curb unnecessary referrals and health care costs, Dr. Barney suggests.

It’s important to note, too, that diabetic patients have other eye care issues than simply retinopathy, and though AI technology is progressing to the point of analyzing diabetic fundus examinations, doctors of optometry still are crucial to furnishing that care.

“Those patients frequently have more fluctuation in their refractive error, have more ocular surface issues, and if they wear contact lenses, need closer monitoring of their corneal health,” Dr. Barney says. “Again, the proactive optometrist could make their expertise and services for those conditions known to the primary medical provider, and in turn, become part of the medical team managing the diabetic patient’s eye care needs.”

Read more about optometry’s essential, expanding role in diabetes care in AOA Focus and access the AOA’s evidence-based clinical practice guideline, Eye Care of the Patient with Diabetes Mellitus—Second Edition.

News The computer will see you now: AI technology produces mixed results Byadmin November 9, 2021 Artificial intelligence (AI) produced a mixed bag of results when screening diabetic retinopathy in a “real-world” clinical setting, researchers say, setting expectations for autonomous grading syst...

Data breaches cost insurers big but providers more frequentlyHealth care providers reported breaches of patient health i...
11/09/2021

Data breaches cost insurers big but providers more frequently

Health care providers reported breaches of patient health information (PHI) far more often than any other HIPAA-covered entity. However, insurers’ fewer breaches still accounted for grossly more records.

Published online in JAMA Network, a new analysis found providers were responsible for 7 in 10 of all reported breaches of PHI between 2010 and 2017, yet accounted for fewer than 1 in 4 actual health records breached in that time. Essentially, the data reflects the sheer volume of massive insurer breaches, such as Anthem and Premera Blue Cross in 2015, but also illustrates the need for health care providers to adequately safeguard patients’ protected health information (PHI) from nascent external threats.

Per HIPAA’s Security Rule and the Health IT for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act of 2009, covered entities—providers, health plans, clearinghouses or business associates (BAs)—are required not only to preserve the confidentiality, integrity and security of patients’ PHI, but also report its unauthorized disclosure after discovery of a breach. And in the years immediately following HITECH, covered entities did report breaches to the tune of 29.1 million between 2010 and 2013. And while that number is significant, it’s only climbed higher in recent years with emerging technology and better understanding of covered entities’ responsibilities.

Per their study, researchers from Massachusetts General Hospital Center for Quantitative Health analyzed the trove of public data collected by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Office of Civil Rights (OCR) to examine the nature and extent of breaches between 2010 and 2017. They found breaches ranging in size from 500 to 78.8 million records with the number of individual breach reports generally increasing with each passing year.

Health care providers were the most commonly breached entity during that time with 1,503 breaches accounting for a cumulative total of 37.1 million records. Next most common, insurers, reported 278 breaches between 2010 and 2017 but accounted for the largest share of breached records with a cumulative total of 110.4 million.

Moreover, authors describe an evolving shift in the way reported data breaches occur as hacking threats surpass physical theft in recent years. Although paper or film records were the most commonly reported breached—with 510 breaches comprising a total of 3.4 million records—network servers were reported breached 410 times for a total of 139.9 million records compromised. So, too, the most commonly breached locations shifted from laptop or film in 2010 to network server and email in 2017, authors note.

“Despite the ethical and legal obligation to protect patient privacy and efforts to establish best practices for health care information security, breach rates have increased and health care providers accounted for a large share of those breaches,” the study states.

“Although networked digital health records have the potential to improve clinical care and facilitate learning health systems, they also have the potential for harm to vast numbers of patients at once if data security is not improved.”

Act now: Are you HIPAA compliant?

Word to the wise: Nobody is immune from data breaches or cybersecurity issues, so it’s important to make every effort to protect PHI, be it from malicious intent or mindless accident. Although cyberattacks are a very real threat to PHI, commonly it’s something as painfully ordinary as a lost or stolen laptop or cell phone that had access to data or practice systems.

In a May 2017 AOA Focus article, Marc Haskelson, president and CEO of Compliancy Group, says the “human factor” represents the preponderance of violations reported on the OCR’s “Wall of Shame.” Compliancy Group, an AOAExcel® endorsed business partner, offers a total HIPAA compliance plan and resources to help doctors of optometry navigate through HIPAA, HITECH and other federal regulations and enforcement.

In his experience, Haskelson says many breaches result from inadequate passwords to phishing scams and even lackadaisical building management, such as housing server equipment in an unlocked room. Time and time again, it’s a lack of proper policies and procedures on the part of the provider that result in HIPAA compliancy shortcomings.

“The good news—the reality—is that most people don’t get hacked because they’re careful and use good, common sense,” Haskelson says. “But in the world of cybersecurity, you must understand that if someone wants to hack your system badly enough, they will hack it.”

Learn more about Compliancy Group’s total HIPAA compliance solution.

The AOA also offers members HIPAA tools and resources to help practices begin developing policies that make your practice compliant, including a step-by-step overview to help understand the compliance process. Access the HHS’ HIPAA for Professionals webpage.

News Data breaches cost insurers big but providers more frequently Byadmin November 9, 2021 Health care providers reported breaches of patient health information (PHI) far more often than any other HIPAA-covered entity. However, insurers’ fewer breaches still accounted for grossly more records. Pu...

The privileges of providing careExcerpted from page 38 of the September/October 2021 edition of AOA Focus.Hospitalists s...
11/09/2021

The privileges of providing care

Excerpted from page 38 of the September/October 2021 edition of AOA Focus.

Hospitalists see it all, right? Naturally, inpatient hospital settings experience large volumes of medically complex patients, ergo a wide range of cases.

But this patient?

This patient had everyone stumped.

“The patient had double vision and already had extensive lab testing and imaging that were unremarkable, and the hospitalist still couldn’t figure it out,” recalls Amanda Legge, O.D., a practitioner in Wyomissing, Pennsylvania. “It seemed like it was maybe related to the diabetes, but the sugars weren’t up very high. It was borderline: Do we treat or not?”

Called in to consult on the patient admitted to Penn State Health St. Joseph Medical Center, Dr. Legge says aside from a sixth cranial nerve palsy (CNVI), there wasn’t much to go on. That is, until Dr. Legge took a moment to sit and converse more thoroughly with the patient. Lo and behold, the patient volunteered that he had not only a new kitten at home who was biting at his ears at night but also a swollen lymph node under the ear, the same side as the CNVI. Dr. Legge recommended bloodwork and it came back definitive: felinosis.

The culprit now known, staff treated the patient for cat scratch disease and away went the swollen lymph node, while the double vision resolved itself with no retinitis or other eye findings.

“Just sitting and talking to the patient about what’s involved, more than just that physical exam, is greatly important,” Dr. Legge says. “Sometimes hospitalists can lose that in terms of how much they’re managing at any one time. But when I go consult, I don’t have all those other patients that I’m managing. I have that time to sit, do that full history and put the pieces together.”

Leveraging optometry’s prowess as America’s primary eye care providers is one of many reasons why the profession can—and is—making a difference in hospital systems the nation over. Although typically considered office-based, private practitioners, doctors of optometry holding hospital privileges ensure a continuity of care for patients by providing heightened awareness of the need for and value of in-hospital eye health care in the community, notes the AOA’s Optometric Hospital Privileges Manual.

In short, hospital privileges for optometry realize the promise of hospitals in the first place: a center of medical expertise that relies on the best of inter-professional collaboration. Where emergency departments (EDs) and hospitalists may have general experience in spades, they lack the specialized expertise in the ocular system that doctors of optometry possess.

“I can’t tell you how frequently we hear from our emergency room doctors, ‘Oh, thank goodness we have good, reliable eye care,’ because it’s just not their area of expertise,” Dr. Legge says. “They’re trained to diagnose and quickly manage complex emergencies, such as heart attacks and strokes, and it’s okay they’re not brushed up on the eye care specialty—that’s where we come in.”

Optometry in the hospital

Optometry delivers more than two-thirds of the primary eye health care in the U.S., with doctors of optometry practicing in more than 10,176 communities and over 99% of Americans having access to a doctor of optometry. And that’s not changing any time soon. The Association of American Medical Colleges continues to project a broad shortage of primary care physicians over the next decade, as well as an overall shortage of ophthalmologists. But where have all these providers gone?

In 1961, nearly half of all U.S. practitioners were primary care; however, that is presently only about a third. That delineation, highlighted in a 2017 article in The American Journal of Medicine, served to emphasize how most physicians currently prefer a specialty or subspecialty as opposed to primary care medicine.

“There will not be enough family practitioners to provide primary care to the entire U.S. population; they will need help from other health care providers,” the commentary concludes.

But what does that mean for optometry in hospital settings? An analysis of nationwide ED visits and utilization by the AOA Health Policy Institute (HPI) found many urgent eye-related visits could be treated in an outpatient optometry office or clinic. In fact, 2016 data indicates that only 1.1% of eye-related episodes in the ED resulted in a hospital admission. In other words, these cases were likely the kinds of cases that doctors of optometry routinely deal with in their own practices, e.g., infections, foreign body removal, corneal abrasions, dry eyes, flashes and floaters, diplopia and other ocular symptoms.

Dr. Legge concurs: “In the ED setting, I would say 98% of the time it’s an emergency that would normally walk into our own office or those of any optometrist around the country. Inpatient is a little different. Most commonly we’re consulted for vision disturbances or double vision with the hospital’s stroke protocol or protocols for septicemia that warrant a dilated fundus examination to rule out endophthalmitis.”

What’s more, optometry fits well into a changing hospital operating scheme. A trend to outpatient services has forced hospitals to reevaluate their position in the medical marketplace, and doctors of optometry, as primary eye care providers, can help the hospital deliver these services in a very efficient manner. The Optometric Hospital Privileges Manual notes that doctors of optometry are primarily providers of and referral sources for outpatient services and are valuable contributors both directly and indirectly to hospital income. Cataract referrals or the utilization of in-house lab and imaging services help hospitals, while optometry’s advancing scope of practice nationwide has opened new avenues to care with certain laser procedures.

In Shreveport, Louisiana, Stephen Lewis, O.D., staff optometrist at Willis-Knighton Medical Center, says the hospital system’s Eye Center makes available YAG and SLT lasers for glaucoma procedures. As Louisiana’s optometric scope of practice authorizes these laser procedures, the hospital works with doctors to gain “non-core” privileges for utilizing these instruments.

“It’s an incredible service to be able to offer my optometric colleagues,” Dr. Lewis says. “It gives me great pride that my hospital system respects and acknowledges the capability of optometry and allows us to do what we can do.”

Obtaining hospital privileges

Optometry is widely recognized for imparting value in today’s health care delivery system, and the provision of optometric services in a hospital setting is mutually beneficial. But obtaining hospital privileges is not the easiest of processes and, in some cases, can be met with resistance. The AOA developed its Optometric Hospital Privileges Manual to help doctors navigate this difficult landscape.

The manual provides practical information, including important insights regarding hospital bylaws, legal issues and template documents to prepare doctors for the application process. A co-author/reviewer of the Optometric Hospital Privileges Manual, Dr. Lewis says it helps answer that age-old question: Where do I start?

The answer: The medical staff office.

“Every hospital has one and they function in credentialing new doctors and maintaining credentials,” Dr. Lewis explains. “It may be advisable to have a conversation with the chief of staff to get a feel for the politics of it, too. I’d say be prepared to share your value to the health care system in terms of what you can provide as an optometrist to their patients.

“If you can prove your value, it makes it easier and simpler.” Also, get a sense for the practitioner levels at the hospital and the pros and cons of each. Dr. Lewis says as a mid-level practitioner in his hospital, he retains the same admitting/discharging privileges as a physician assistant or nurse practitioner albeit without voting privileges. But such responsibility comes with the need to respond when and where you need to do so. Therefore, it’s important to know what you know but also know what you don’t know, Dr. Lewis says. Collaboration is the great benefit of a hospital setting, so use it.

“Don’t hesitate to call in others to help,” Dr. Lewis says. “And if you’re called in, that likely means someone else didn’t know what was going on.”

With each consult that Dr. Lewis provides, he’s solidifying himself as the “go-to guy” for eye care not only in the ED or inpatient setting but also in private practice. Upon discharge, these patients may seek follow-up care or establish as new patients while hospital staff themselves may seek routine care.

Alternatively, be prepared for resistance. It’s not uncommon for hospital bylaws to omit optometry altogether—bylaws are a necessary step in credentialing and can take a long, arduous process to rewrite—and, of course, there remain providers or staff who may chafe at optometry on staff.

When David Dexter, O.D., sought privileges at the local health system in Oswego, New York, he recalls encountering such resistance from two ophthalmologists on hospital staff. On Dr. Dexter’s side was the fact that he was a well-known, homegrown eye care provider in the area whom many in the community had known for decades, including many of the practitioners. And that was to his advantage.

For instance, when a new endocrinologist joined the community, Dr. Dexter sent a welcome letter and a copy of his HEDIS forms for diabetic eye exams, suggesting the opportunity to collaborate. The endocrinologist was intrigued and noted he never received such detailed forms from ophthalmologists in town.

“I went out in the community and introduced myself to everybody as Dr. Dexter, your new eye doctor,” he says. That level of familiarity—and a lot of persistence—ultimately paid off.

Again, Dr. Dexter leveraged his primary eye health care expertise as a valuable service to the hospital. While hospitalists are well-trained and know what they can provide, none of them get enough experience with eye education, Dr. Dexter notes. Therefore, he frequently takes ED calls or the random doctor’s consultation.

“The more that optometrists are involved, the more that’s going to have a positive effect on our scope,” Dr. Dexter says. “It’s not always easy, and you have to persevere and establish and maintain that trust, but it’s rewarding.”

Fulfilling care

“Rewarding” is precisely the word that Michelle Cohen, O.D., uses to describe her work in a rehabilitation hospital in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Providing neuro-vision treatment and therapy for brain-injury patients, in addition to traditional vision therapy services in private practice, Dr. Cohen collaborates with physical therapy (PT) and occupational therapy (OT) staff to ensure stroke patients can regain some mobility and independence.

As opposed to seeking hospital privileges, Dr. Cohen was approached by a staff OT who inquired about bringing her vision therapy services into the hospital. Now, six years later, Dr. Cohen says the opportunity to practice in the hospital setting opened her up to providing not only neuro-vision therapy but also the medical eye care that typically coincides with an older, sicker population. In consulting on patients’ vision, Dr. Cohen works with OT and PT to ensure patients find midline orientation to stand, walk and transfer. This can include prescribing yoked prisms to help with gait or posture or addressing other vision symptoms to ensure patients’ swift rehabilitation and discharge. It’s a win-win for patients, care providers and the hospital itself.

“To know that when I go in there, I can help these patients get better faster and ensure their placement is back home as opposed to a long-term facility, is amazing,” Dr. Cohen says. “This level of collaboration is best for the patient, and it’s actually a lot of fun for all of us.”

News The privileges of providing care Byadmin November 9, 2021 Excerpted from page 38 of the September/October 2021 edition of AOA Focus. Hospitalists see it all, right? Naturally, inpatient hospital settings experience large volumes of medically complex patients, ergo a wide range of cases. But thi...

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