International Journal of Nursins Practice
Integrating Nursing–Teleophthalmology Improves Diabetic Retinopathy Screening in Primary Healthcare, Reducing Unnecessary Referrals to Specialist Healthcare
Jacira Xavier de Carvalho, Fernando K. Malerbi, Silvia Ferreira Bortoto, Mozania Reis de Matos, Cristiane das Graças Dias Cavalcante, Elenilda Almeida Silva Andrade, Gabriela Bonfim Vieira, Márcia Silva Queiroz
This work aimed to evaluate the use of teleophthalmology by a primary healthcare nursing team for the diagnosis and
referral for diabetic retinopathy to specialized healthcare in relation to numbers referred for specialized healthcare.
In this quantitative, cross-sectional service evaluation study, participants with type 2 diabetes mellitus underwent a
fundoscopy examination between February and June 2020. Using a portable retinal camera attached to a smartphone, nurses
acquired fundus images that were stored on a cloud platform, enabling remote reading by a retinal specialist. The study was
conducted at a primary healthcare urban centre on the outskirts of São Paulo, Brazil.
The study enrolled 779 participants, of whom 150 were identified as having diabetic retinopathy present; in another
434, evidence of diabetic retinopathy was absent, and 195 individuals (25%) were classified as having ungradable images. In total,
345 participants were referred for specialized appraisal, 150 of whom due to evidence of diabetic retinopathy and for another 195
participants owing to ungradable images. Thus, more than half of the imaged participants (56%) were not eligible for referral to
specialist healthcare and remained treated in primary care.
Nursing–teleophthalmology integration reduced specialized healthcare referral numbers by more than half. This approach contributed to better triage with a more robust evaluation for diabetic retinopathy diagnostic suspicion, reducing un-
necessary referral.