Fundus anomalies: what the pediatrician's eye can't see.

BACKGROUND With increasing workloads for hospital doctors, routine funduscopy may be abandoned. It is not known how often pediatricians perform funduscopy and how skilled they are in performing it. OBJECTIVE To assess hospital pediatricians' ability to diagnose abnormalities of the ocular fundi and to determine whether a short tutorial can improve their skills. METHODS Physicians working at the pediatric division of a university-affiliated hospital participated in the study. All participants completed an anonymous questionnaire regarding their experience and skills in performing funduscopy. A pictorial quiz containing 20 fundus pictures of common findings in children was given. After completing the quiz, a 45-minute tutorial on common fundus anomalies was given. At the end of the lecture, the same quiz was given again. The percentage of correct answers for each quiz was scored. RESULTS Sixteen physicians completed the study (11 pediatric residents and five senior pediatricians). Most participants did not feel competent at performing a fundus examination [mean score on a visual analog scale 1.96; range 0 (not competent at all) to 7]. The mean score for the fundus pictures quiz given before the tutorial was 48% (range 37-58%). The average score of the residents (47%) did not differ significantly from that of the senior pediatricians (42%). After the tutorial the mean grade increased significantly to 60% (P = 0.002). This was true both for residents (63%; P = 0.001) and seniors (55%; P = 0.004). CONCLUSIONS Our study shows that funduscopy is being neglected by pediatricians. Even a short tutorial may significantly improve the diagnostic value of this test.