Point of care eye imaging

Key features

  • 30 second capture of both eyes
  • No dilation required
  • Automated high-definition retinal imaging
  • Integrates with EMR via PACS of DICOM

Optimize outcomes with point-of-care eye imaging

 

Transforming eyecare and healthcare. Eye diseases often go unnoticed until irreversible vision loss sets in. iCare retinal imaging devices help prevent this by providing convenient, point-of-care eye imaging. The fast and fully automated devices take detail rich images through pupils as small as 2.5 mm, without need of dilation, ensuring a comfortable patient experience. Our devices seamlessly integrate with EMRs and PAC systems through DICOM capabilities, streamlining workflows.

Enabling accurate pathology diagnosis

iCare devices consistently capture high-quality retinal images, facilitating easy pathology diagnosis. The detailed artifact-free image quality ensures earlier diagnosis, therefore improving outcomes.

Widely deployed across healthcare settings

iCare retinal imaging devices, find extensive use in primary care, hospitals, FQHCs, optometry and ophthalmology clinics throughout the United States. iCare devices easily capture both emergency case diseases and lifetime slow progressing diseases.

Point of care eye imaging

Early and frequent retinal imaging can help prevent vision loss. Time, money, and access to care are often barriers that patients face when receiving care. iCare helps eliminate those barriers by fully-automatic retinal imaging devices which can be operated at any health-care facility. Eye screenings can be implemented easily and the devices operated with minimal training. Since iCare imaging devices do not require eye dilation drops and can image both eyes in less than one minute, they greatly reduce time. Implementing an iCare retinal imaging device can help close health care gaps and improve HEDIS scores in a cost-effective way.

Diabetic retinopathy is the leading cause of blindness in the working-age population [1]

“Nearly half of all people with diabetes do not receive eye health screenings as recommended in guidelines.” [2]

[1] National Library of Medicine website, “Diabetic retinopathy as the leading cause of blindness and early predictor of cascading complications—risks and mitigation” Accessed 07/29/24

[2] DiabetesJournals website, “Disparities in Diabetes-Related Retinal Disease and Approaches to Improve Screening Rates” Accessed 07/29/24

[3] National Eye Institute Website, Diabetes prevents vision loss PDF  Accessed 07/29/24

[4] American Academy of Ophthalmology website, “Sixty Percent of Americans with Diabetes Skip Annual Sight-Saving Exams”,  Accessed 07/29/24 [5] National Eye Institute Website, Learn About Eye Health, Diabetic retinopathy, Accessed 07/29/24