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An evaluation of medical college departments of ophthalmology in India and change following provision of modern instrumentation and training

AIM: To evaluate teaching and practice in medical college ophthalmology departments in a representative Indian state and changes following provision of modern instrumentation and training. STUDY TYPE: Prospective qualitative study. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Teaching and practice in all medical colleges...

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Autores principales: Thomas, Ravi, Dogra, Mangat
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Medknow Publications 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2636055/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18158398
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author Thomas, Ravi
Dogra, Mangat
author_facet Thomas, Ravi
Dogra, Mangat
author_sort Thomas, Ravi
collection PubMed
description AIM: To evaluate teaching and practice in medical college ophthalmology departments in a representative Indian state and changes following provision of modern instrumentation and training. STUDY TYPE: Prospective qualitative study. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Teaching and practice in all medical colleges in the state assessed on two separate occasions by external evaluators. Preferred criteria for training and care were pre-specified. Methodology included site visits to document functioning and conduct interviews. Assessments included resident teaching, use of instrumentation provided specifically for training and standard of eye care. The first evaluation (1998) was followed by provision of modern instrumentation and training on two separate occasions, estimated at Rupees 34 crores. The follow-up evaluation in 2006 used the same methodology as the first. RESULTS: Eight departments were evaluated on the first occasion; there were 11 at the second. On the first assessment, none of the programs met the criteria for training or care. Following the provision of modern instrumentation and training, intraocular lens usage increased dramatically; but the overall situation remained essentially unchanged in the 8 departments evaluated 8 years later. Routine comprehensive eye examination was neither taught nor practiced. Individually supervised surgical training using beam splitters was not practiced in any program; neither was modern management of complications or its teaching. Phacoemulsification was not taught, and residents were not confident of setting up practice. Instruments provided specifically for training were not used for that purpose. Students reported that theoretical teaching was good. CONCLUSIONS: Drastic changes in training, patient care and accountability are needed in most medical college ophthalmology departments.
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spelling pubmed-26360552009-02-10 An evaluation of medical college departments of ophthalmology in India and change following provision of modern instrumentation and training Thomas, Ravi Dogra, Mangat Indian J Ophthalmol Original Article AIM: To evaluate teaching and practice in medical college ophthalmology departments in a representative Indian state and changes following provision of modern instrumentation and training. STUDY TYPE: Prospective qualitative study. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Teaching and practice in all medical colleges in the state assessed on two separate occasions by external evaluators. Preferred criteria for training and care were pre-specified. Methodology included site visits to document functioning and conduct interviews. Assessments included resident teaching, use of instrumentation provided specifically for training and standard of eye care. The first evaluation (1998) was followed by provision of modern instrumentation and training on two separate occasions, estimated at Rupees 34 crores. The follow-up evaluation in 2006 used the same methodology as the first. RESULTS: Eight departments were evaluated on the first occasion; there were 11 at the second. On the first assessment, none of the programs met the criteria for training or care. Following the provision of modern instrumentation and training, intraocular lens usage increased dramatically; but the overall situation remained essentially unchanged in the 8 departments evaluated 8 years later. Routine comprehensive eye examination was neither taught nor practiced. Individually supervised surgical training using beam splitters was not practiced in any program; neither was modern management of complications or its teaching. Phacoemulsification was not taught, and residents were not confident of setting up practice. Instruments provided specifically for training were not used for that purpose. Students reported that theoretical teaching was good. CONCLUSIONS: Drastic changes in training, patient care and accountability are needed in most medical college ophthalmology departments. Medknow Publications 2008 /pmc/articles/PMC2636055/ /pubmed/18158398 Text en Copyright: © Indian Journal of Ophthalmology http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0 This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Thomas, Ravi
Dogra, Mangat
An evaluation of medical college departments of ophthalmology in India and change following provision of modern instrumentation and training
title An evaluation of medical college departments of ophthalmology in India and change following provision of modern instrumentation and training
title_full An evaluation of medical college departments of ophthalmology in India and change following provision of modern instrumentation and training
title_fullStr An evaluation of medical college departments of ophthalmology in India and change following provision of modern instrumentation and training
title_full_unstemmed An evaluation of medical college departments of ophthalmology in India and change following provision of modern instrumentation and training
title_short An evaluation of medical college departments of ophthalmology in India and change following provision of modern instrumentation and training
title_sort evaluation of medical college departments of ophthalmology in india and change following provision of modern instrumentation and training
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2636055/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18158398
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