Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT01109459

Multimodal Physician Intervention to Detect Amblyopia

Multimodal Physician Intervention to Detect Amblyopia (Recruiting Title "Equipping Primary Care Physicians to Improve Care for Children")

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
136 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Alabama at Birmingham · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Current research shows low rates of quantitative vision screening at preschool ages in the medical home. This study targets providers (PCPs) to evaluate the effectiveness of a web-based intervention to improve knowledge about strabismus, amblyopia and preschool vision screening, to increase preschool vision screening rates, and to improve rates of diagnosis of strabismus and amblyopia by eye specialists.

Detailed description

Despite decades of research showing adverse neural consequences of abnormal vision, little has changed for amblyopic children. Over the past 40 years, data have shown that most children with amblyopia are detected late. In our health care system, primary care physicians play a pivotal role in translating findings about amblyopia into practice. But, our experience with the Maternal and Child Health Bureau (MCHB) / NEI expert panel on Vision Screening in the Preschool Child and the MCHB/ American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) Project Universal Preschool Vision Screening revealed that primary care physicians get very little training about amblyopia and risk factors. Consequently, many do not screen aggressively for these conditions. The University of Alabama Departments of Optometry, Pediatrics and Continuing Medical Education, in collaboration Medicaid Agencies in Alabama, South Carolina and Illinois, have developed a novel, internet-based, multi-modal strategy to increase the understanding and recognition of amblyopia and its risk factors by pediatricians and primary care physicians in office based settings. We have designed a cluster-randomized, controlled clinical trial to test whether our intervention results in improved performance by "intervention" physicians compared to control physicians (exposed to a web-based intervention for pediatric blood pressure screening and adolescent chlamydia screening). Our design, along with pre / post-intervention and control / intervention performance measures, will evaluate changes in practice attributable to the intervention versus those occurring from other sources over time. Our final analysis will show whether preschool patients of intervention physicians are more likely to be identified with strabismus or amblyopia. This research forges a critical link between the truly phenomenal body of amblyopia research fostered by the NEI and the health care offered to American children.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERPediatric blood pressure screeningWebsite presenting case-based education with tailoring based on knowledge and interactive with responses collected on line. Has a tool box for office materials to promote and encourage guideline based performance.
OTHERPediatric vision screeningWebsite presenting case-based education about amblyopia and strabismus with tailoring based on knowledge and interactive with responses collected on line. Has a tool box for office materials to promote and encourage guideline based performance.

Timeline

Start date
2004-09-01
Primary completion
2008-10-01
Completion
2008-10-01
First posted
2010-04-23
Last updated
2010-04-23

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01109459. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.