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  1. Article ; Online: Post-COVID-19 and the Portuguese national eye care system challenge.

    Carneiro, Vera Lúcia Alves / Andrade, Helena / Matias, Luísa / de Sousa, Raul Alberto Ribeiro Correia

    Journal of optometry

    2020  Volume 13, Issue 4, Page(s) 257–261

    Abstract: ... care system funded by the State proved, in this context, its importance and relevance to the Portuguese ... CoV-2 (COVID-19), had profound impact in many countries and their health care systems. Regarding ... multidisciplinary eye care teams remains the main hurdle to overcome and insure universal eye care in Portugal ...

    Abstract The pandemic of the severe acute respiratory syndrome disease caused by the new coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19), had profound impact in many countries and their health care systems. Regarding Portugal, a suppression strategy with social distancing was adopted, attempting to break the transmission chains, bending the epidemy curve and reducing mortality. These measures seek to prevent an eventual National Health Service over-running, enforcing the suspension of all elective and non-urgent health care. Despite the success in so far, there is a consensus on the need to recover the previous level of health care provision and further enhance it. The Portuguese National Health Service, as a public, universal access, health care system funded by the State proved, in this context, its importance and relevance to the Portuguese population. However, long standing issues, such as the pre pandemic over long waiting lists for hospital ophthalmology attendance, whose determinants are fully identified but still unmet, emerge amplified from this pandemic. The lack of primary eye care in the National Health Service is a significant bottleneck, placing a huge stress on hospital-based care. An exclusive ophthalmologist's center care was over-runned before pandemic and will be even more so. The optometrist's exclusion from differentiated, multisectoral and multidisciplinary eye care teams remains the main hurdle to overcome and insure universal eye care in Portugal. National Health Service highlights the consequences of an overcome model. Universal eye care more than ever demands an evidence-based, integrated approach with primary eye care, in the community, on time and of proximity.
    MeSH term(s) Betacoronavirus ; COVID-19 ; Coronavirus Infections/epidemiology ; Coronavirus Infections/prevention & control ; Delivery of Health Care/organization & administration ; Eye Diseases/therapy ; Humans ; Infection Control/methods ; Infectious Disease Transmission, Patient-to-Professional/prevention & control ; National Health Programs/organization & administration ; Ophthalmologists ; Optometrists ; Pandemics/prevention & control ; Personal Protective Equipment ; Pneumonia, Viral/epidemiology ; Pneumonia, Viral/prevention & control ; Portugal/epidemiology ; SARS-CoV-2 ; State Medicine
    Keywords covid19
    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-05-11
    Publishing country Spain
    Document type Journal Article ; Review
    ZDB-ID 2443288-X
    ISSN 1989-1342 ; 1888-4296
    ISSN (online) 1989-1342
    ISSN 1888-4296
    DOI 10.1016/j.optom.2020.05.001
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  2. Article ; Online: Post-COVID-19 and the Portuguese national eye care system challenge

    Carneiro, Vera Lúcia Alves / Andrade, Helena / Matias, Luísa / de Sousa, Raul Alberto Ribeiro Correia

    Journal of Optometry

    2020  Volume 13, Issue 4, Page(s) 257–261

    Keywords Optometry ; covid19
    Language English
    Publisher Elsevier BV
    Publishing country us
    Document type Article ; Online
    ZDB-ID 2443288-X
    ISSN 1989-1342 ; 1888-4296
    ISSN (online) 1989-1342
    ISSN 1888-4296
    DOI 10.1016/j.optom.2020.05.001
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

    More links

    Kategorien

  3. Article: Post-COVID-19 and the Portuguese national eye care system challenge

    Carneiro, Vera Lúcia Alves / Andrade, Helena / Matias, Luísa / de Sousa, Raul Alberto Ribeiro Correia

    J Optom

    Abstract: ... care system funded by the State proved, in this context, its importance and relevance to the Portuguese ... CoV-2 (COVID-19), had profound impact in many countries and their health care systems. Regarding ... multidisciplinary eye care teams remains the main hurdle to overcome and insure universal eye care in Portugal ...

    Abstract The pandemic of the severe acute respiratory syndrome disease caused by the new coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19), had profound impact in many countries and their health care systems. Regarding Portugal, a suppression strategy with social distancing was adopted, attempting to break the transmission chains, bending the epidemy curve and reducing mortality. These measures seek to prevent an eventual National Health Service over-running, enforcing the suspension of all elective and non-urgent health care. Despite the success in so far, there is a consensus on the need to recover the previous level of health care provision and further enhance it. The Portuguese National Health Service, as a public, universal access, health care system funded by the State proved, in this context, its importance and relevance to the Portuguese population. However, long standing issues, such as the pre pandemic over long waiting lists for hospital ophthalmology attendance, whose determinants are fully identified but still unmet, emerge amplified from this pandemic. The lack of primary eye care in the National Health Service is a significant bottleneck, placing a huge stress on hospital-based care. An exclusive ophthalmologist's center care was over-runned before pandemic and will be even more so. The optometrist's exclusion from differentiated, multisectoral and multidisciplinary eye care teams remains the main hurdle to overcome and insure universal eye care in Portugal. National Health Service highlights the consequences of an overcome model. Universal eye care more than ever demands an evidence-based, integrated approach with primary eye care, in the community, on time and of proximity.
    Keywords covid19
    Publisher WHO
    Document type Article
    Note WHO #Covidence: #680364
    Database COVID19

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