• About
  • Subscribe
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Thursday, December 5, 2024
Newsletter
SUBSCRIBE
  • Latest News
  • All Sections
    • Ophthalmic insights
      • Policy & regulation
      • Company updates & acquisitions
      • Research
      • Clinical trials
      • Workforce
      • Product approvals
      • Conferences
      • Opinion
      • Indigenous eye health
      • Retail
    • Eye disease
      • Dry eye
      • Myopia
      • Cataract
      • Glaucoma
      • Macular disease – AMD
      • Diabetic eye disease
      • Inherited retinal disease
      • Corneal disease
      • Presbyopia
      • Eye infections
    • Ophthalmic Careers
      • New appointments
      • Industry profiles
      • Graduates
    • Ophthalmic organisations
      • Regulators
      • Optometry networks
      • Private ophthalmology clinics
      • Associations
      • Patient support bodies
      • Eye research institutions
      • Optometry schools
      • Optical Dispensing trainers
      • Medical schools
      • RANZCO
  • Features
    • Report
    • Soapbox
  • Ophthalmic education
    • CPD – Optometry
    • Optical Dispensing
    • Orthoptics Australia
    • Practice management
  • Products
    • Ophthalmic Treatments
      • Ophthalmic lenses
      • Lens treatments
      • Myopia interventions
      • Light-based therapy
      • Minimally invasive glaucoma surgery (MIGS)
      • Gene therapy
      • Laser treatments
      • Supplements
      • Eyewear & frames
      • Behavioural optometry/vision training
      • Contact lenses
      • Anti-VEGF
      • Intraocular lenses (IOLs)
      • Pharmaceuticals & consumables
    • Ophthalmic equipment & diagnostics
      • Biometry – axial length
      • Perimetry & visual fields
      • OCT
      • Phoropter
      • Autorefractor
      • Tonometry
      • Topography
      • Multimodal imaging
      • Retinal imaging
      • Anterior segment imaging
      • Software & data management
      • Microscopes
      • Slit lamps
      • Lens edging
      • Stands, chairs and tables
      • Ultrasound
      • Dry eye diagnostics
      • Low vision aids
  • Research
  • Classifieds
No Results
View All Results
  • Latest News
  • All Sections
    • Ophthalmic insights
      • Policy & regulation
      • Company updates & acquisitions
      • Research
      • Clinical trials
      • Workforce
      • Product approvals
      • Conferences
      • Opinion
      • Indigenous eye health
      • Retail
    • Eye disease
      • Dry eye
      • Myopia
      • Cataract
      • Glaucoma
      • Macular disease – AMD
      • Diabetic eye disease
      • Inherited retinal disease
      • Corneal disease
      • Presbyopia
      • Eye infections
    • Ophthalmic Careers
      • New appointments
      • Industry profiles
      • Graduates
    • Ophthalmic organisations
      • Regulators
      • Optometry networks
      • Private ophthalmology clinics
      • Associations
      • Patient support bodies
      • Eye research institutions
      • Optometry schools
      • Optical Dispensing trainers
      • Medical schools
      • RANZCO
  • Features
    • Report
    • Soapbox
  • Ophthalmic education
    • CPD – Optometry
    • Optical Dispensing
    • Orthoptics Australia
    • Practice management
  • Products
    • Ophthalmic Treatments
      • Ophthalmic lenses
      • Lens treatments
      • Myopia interventions
      • Light-based therapy
      • Minimally invasive glaucoma surgery (MIGS)
      • Gene therapy
      • Laser treatments
      • Supplements
      • Eyewear & frames
      • Behavioural optometry/vision training
      • Contact lenses
      • Anti-VEGF
      • Intraocular lenses (IOLs)
      • Pharmaceuticals & consumables
    • Ophthalmic equipment & diagnostics
      • Biometry – axial length
      • Perimetry & visual fields
      • OCT
      • Phoropter
      • Autorefractor
      • Tonometry
      • Topography
      • Multimodal imaging
      • Retinal imaging
      • Anterior segment imaging
      • Software & data management
      • Microscopes
      • Slit lamps
      • Lens edging
      • Stands, chairs and tables
      • Ultrasound
      • Dry eye diagnostics
      • Low vision aids
  • Research
  • Classifieds
No Results
View All Results
Home Ophthalmic insights Indigenous eye health

OCTs and injection clinics in Top End communities end costly trips for care

by Myles Hume
February 16, 2021
in Indigenous eye health, Local, News
Reading Time: 3 mins read
A A
Patients in Katherine previously needed to travel to more than 300km to Darwin for an OCT scan.

Patients in Katherine previously needed to travel to more than 300km to Darwin for an OCT scan.

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Funding for OCT machines and the embedding of medical retina and injection clinics in two new locations in the Northern Territory’s Top End has helped turn around poor treatment attendance and compliance among the local Indigenous population.

Previously, patients in the region with diabetic macular oedema (DME) were required to travel long distances to the Royal Darwin Hospital (RDH) that housed the only OCT machine – a vital tool in determining whether patients would benefit from anti-VEGF therapy or to monitor outcomes.

Peter McCluskey.

According to Professor Peter McCluskey, director of the University of Sydney’s Save Sight Institute (SSI), 10 to 20 patients per week and their carers were flown to Darwin for assessment from communities located hundreds of kilometres away like Gove and Katherine.

But the transport and accommodation costs for the care was costing NT Health large sums of money, and many patients either did not attend or discontinued their treatment.

With the support of McCluskey and other visiting consultants from the SSI, Northern Territory-based ophthalmologists Dr Tharmalingam Mahendrarajah and Dr Nishantha Wijesinghe realised that by funding OCT machines in remote communities they could radically improve the situation and save the health system significant expenditure.

Careful negotiation and lobbying with RDH and NT Health lead to the purchase of an OCT machine for Katherine.

McCluskey and his colleague conducted an audit 12 months after the purchase and showed that within six months the OCT scanner had paid for itself from savings in patient travel. It also demonstrated that patient attendance and treatment outcomes improved significantly.

A second OCT was then purchased for the Gove community. OCTs for other remote communities are now being considered.

Subsequently, McCluskey said monthly medical retina and injection clinics with a consultant and registrar from RDH have been running in Gove and Katherine, with few patients needing to travel to RDH and vastly improved patient compliance and treatment outcomes.

“What we did with this project was come up with a collaborative solution for an area of unmet need, that was causing avoidable blindness,” McCluskey said.

“There is a high prevalence of vision-threatening diabetic retinopathy and a need to take treatment to the community rather than have the patients make frequent trips to Darwin.”

In 2020, McCluskey said the COVID-19 pandemic highlighted the success of the community-based model of care, with regular visiting registrar clinics able to continue in both Gove and Katherine, with back-up telehealth consultant support from Darwin.

“There has been minimal disruption to intravitreal therapy for patients in these communities,” he said.

More reading

Sector lays out $280 million public cataract surgery plan

Ophthalmic sector backs First Nations voice to parliament

Trachoma elimination deadline gets two-year extension

Tags: Dr Nishantha WijesingheDr Tharmalingam MahendrarajahGoveIndigenousintravitreal therapyKatherineOCTPeter McCluskeyremote communitySave Sight InstituteSSI

Related Posts

A new WA clinic will give Aboriginal communities and others greater access to eyecare. Image: Sawoon/stock.adobe.com

New clinic will help address inequities in Aboriginal eyecare

by Staff Writer
December 5, 2024

A new eye clinic aims to make a significant impact in transforming eyecare for Aboriginal communities in Western Australia. A...

Or lack of it, depending on where you live, is the concern of the CPMC and others. Image: BJP7images/stock.adobe.com.

Health ministers warned that fast-track changes could bring ‘postcode’ health care

by Staff Writer
December 5, 2024

Australia’s state health ministers have been warned that the proposed fast-track registration of Specialist International Medical Graduates (SIMGs) risks exacerbating...

Alcon has confirmed its new Unity systems are now registered in Australia, and will be commercially available in 2025. Image: Konektus Photo/Shutterstock.com.

All-new Alcon Unity vitreoretinal and cataract systems approved in Australia

by Myles Hume
December 4, 2024

Alcon has revealed its “highly anticipated” Unity Vitreoretinal Cataract System and Unity Cataract System have been included on the Australian...

Join our newsletter

Insight has been the leading industry publication in Australia for more than 40 years. This longevity is largely due to our ability to consistently deliver accurate and independent news relevant to all ophthalmic professionals and their supporting industry.

Subscribe to our newsletter

About Insight

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
  • Contact
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Collection Notice
  • Privacy Policy

Popular Topics

  • Business
  • Feature
  • Research
  • Technology
  • Therapies
  • Classifieds

© 2024 All Rights Reserved. All content published on this site is the property of Prime Creative Media. Unauthorised reproduction is prohibited

No Results
View All Results
NEWSLETTER
SUBSCRIBE
  • Latest News
  • All Sections
    • Ophthalmic insights
      • Policy & regulation
      • Company updates & acquisitions
      • Research
      • Clinical trials
      • Workforce
      • Product approvals
      • Conferences
      • Opinion
      • Indigenous eye health
      • Retail
    • Eye disease
      • Dry eye
      • Myopia
      • Cataract
      • Glaucoma
      • Macular disease – AMD
      • Diabetic eye disease
      • Inherited retinal disease
      • Corneal disease
      • Presbyopia
      • Eye infections
    • Ophthalmic Careers
      • New appointments
      • Industry profiles
      • Graduates
    • Ophthalmic organisations
      • Regulators
      • Optometry networks
      • Private ophthalmology clinics
      • Associations
      • Patient support bodies
      • Eye research institutions
      • Optometry schools
      • Optical Dispensing trainers
      • Medical schools
      • RANZCO
  • Features
    • Report
    • Soapbox
  • Ophthalmic education
    • CPD – Optometry
    • Optical Dispensing
    • Orthoptics Australia
    • Practice management
  • Products
    • Ophthalmic Treatments
      • Ophthalmic lenses
      • Lens treatments
      • Myopia interventions
      • Light-based therapy
      • Minimally invasive glaucoma surgery (MIGS)
      • Gene therapy
      • Laser treatments
      • Supplements
      • Eyewear & frames
      • Behavioural optometry/vision training
      • Contact lenses
      • Anti-VEGF
      • Intraocular lenses (IOLs)
      • Pharmaceuticals & consumables
    • Ophthalmic equipment & diagnostics
      • Biometry – axial length
      • Perimetry & visual fields
      • OCT
      • Phoropter
      • Autorefractor
      • Tonometry
      • Topography
      • Multimodal imaging
      • Retinal imaging
      • Anterior segment imaging
      • Software & data management
      • Microscopes
      • Slit lamps
      • Lens edging
      • Stands, chairs and tables
      • Ultrasound
      • Dry eye diagnostics
      • Low vision aids
  • Research
  • Classifieds
  • About Us
  • Advertise with Insight
  • Subscribe
  • Contact Insight

© 2024 All Rights Reserved. All content published on this site is the property of Prime Creative Media. Unauthorised reproduction is prohibited