Abstract
Purpose To establish whether first day postoperative review by ophthalmic trained nurses following day case cataract surgery is a safe and effective practice.
Methods A prospective study was undertaken of all patients undergoing day case cataract surgery followed by a domiciliary visit in 1996. Principal outcome measures were: (1) incidence of problems diagnosed by the nurses at the first visit, (2) the rate of referral to the hospital for medical review, (3) incidence of problems identified at the first clinic review (10-14 days later), with particular attention paid to any that might be attributed to an event ‘missed’ by the nurse at the first day, and (4) visual acuity at 3 months, to allow comparison with previously published national outcome measures.
Results From 281 cases, although nurses identified a problem in 11%, only 4.2% required referral back to medical staff from the domiciliary visit; 2.1% required readmission over the first 2 weeks. Only one case (0.35%) was found to have a missed pathology; this patient had no long-term adverse outcome. Visual acuity outcomes at 3 months compared favourably with results from the National Cataract Surgery Survey.
Conclusions Domiciliary visits by ophthalmic trained nurses are a safe alternative to routine hospital review by medical staff.
Similar content being viewed by others
Log in or create a free account to read this content
Gain free access to this article, as well as selected content from this journal and more on nature.com
or
References
The Scottish Office Audit Unit. Day surgery in Scottish hospitals. Edinburgh: SOAU, 1992.
Scottish Health Service Advisory Council: Study Group on the Management of Ophthalmology Services in Scotland. Report on day case surgery for cataract (November 1992).
Scottish Forum for Public Health Medicine. Scottish needs assessment programme: cataract surgery, 1993.
Davies PD, Limacher E, Powell K . Outpatient cataract surgery 1982-1986. Eye 1987;l:728–34.
Watts MT, Pearce JL . Day case cataract surgery. Br J Ophthalmol 1988;72:897–9.
Desai P . The National Cataract Surgery Survey. II. Clinical outcomes. Eye 1993;7:489–94.
Tufail A, Foss AJE, Hamilton AMP . Is the first day postoperative review necessary after cataract extraction? Br J Ophthalmol 1995;79:646–8.
Whitefield L, Crowston J, Little BC . First day follow-up for routine phacoemulsification? Br J Ophthalmol 1996;80:148–50.
Guidelines for cataract surgery 1995. London: The Royal College of Ophthalmologists, 1995.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Additional information
Presented at the spring meeting of the Scottish Ophthalmological Club at the Southern General Hospital, Glasgow, March 1997
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Willins, L., Grant, B. & Kearns, P. Domiciliary postoperative assessment following cataract surgery carried out by specialist nurses. Eye 13, 336–338 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1038/eye.1999.85
Received:
Accepted:
Issue date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/eye.1999.85
Keywords
This article is cited by
-
The surgical management of cataract: barriers, best practices and outcomes
International Ophthalmology (2008)


