Robert, a Veteran from a rural town in Iowa, recently visited the Mason City VA Clinic to establish his VA care. As part of the process, he was sent to the Technology-based Eye Care Services (TECS) room for an eye screening.
Around the same time and several states away, another Veteran named Donald traveled a short distance to the Atlanta VA Clinic for a TECS appointment to get prescription eyeglasses.
Thanks to these TECS visits, both Robert and Donald were saved from losing their vision.
Early detection can save eyesight
Routine eye exams are an important part of maintaining your overall health, especially as you age and the risk for vision problems increases. Many eye diseases that can lead to vision loss show no symptoms in their early stages. Only an eye care specialist can identify them.
Rural communities are currently facing a shortage of eye specialists. That’s where TECS comes in.
What is TECS?
TECS is part of VA’s national TeleEye program and was established as a VA Office of Rural Health enterprise-wide initiative in 2017. Rather than traveling a long distance to their closest VA Medical Center to visit an eye care specialist, a Veteran can go to their local VA primary care clinic for a TECS visit.
“Telehealth really allows us to expand our access to be closer to Veterans, so they save time and travel costs,” said Dr. April Maa, TECS founder and national TeleEye co-lead for the VA Office of Connected Care.
During a TECS visit, a qualified ophthalmology technician who is certified at the assistant level or higher conducts a routine eye exam to check the Veteran’s vision. They screen for common eye diseases, such as cataracts, diabetic retinopathy, glaucoma and macular degeneration.
The technician collects information using digital retinal cameras, tonometers for checking eye pressure and other ocular testing devices. The clinical information is then sent to a TECS reader, a remote eye specialist who reviews the images and decides next steps for the Veteran. The TECS reader follows up with the Veteran to discuss the findings, either by phone or through VA Video Connect, VA’s secure video conferencing telehealth app.
High eye pressure detected at the Mason City VA Clinic
During Robert’s TECS appointment, Amber Ashland noted that his corrected vision was normal—20/20 in both eyes—but his eye pressure readings were off the charts.
“That was the highest eye pressures I had ever seen,” Ashland said. She immediately sought guidance from the TECS reader on duty, Dr. Morgan Pansegrau, a Clinical Resource Hub ophthalmologist, located about 90 miles away in Rochester, Minnesota. “She wanted me to give him medicated eye drops right away to get the pressures down.”
Over the next 2 1/2 hours, Ashland administered the recommended drops, monitored Robert’s eye pressure and took follow-up pictures for Pansegrau. The ophthalmologist later confirmed that Robert had glaucoma. He is now under the close watch of an ophthalmologist and he uses drops every night to keep his eye pressure within normal range.
“Glaucoma is a blinding disease that is silent until it reaches very late stages,” Maa said. “Because this patient was able to see one of our TECS programs, we were able to catch this high pressure, treat it in the clinic and get him plugged into care quickly before the high pressures caused more damage to his vision.”
“Narrow angles” found at the Atlanta VA Clinic
At the Atlanta VA Clinic, Donald also learned that he had glaucoma, but his was more advanced.
Shaquita Cooley identified “narrow angles” causing blockage in the drainage system of Donald’s eyes. She quickly got in touch with Dr. Trennda Rittenbach, the TECS reader stationed at the Clinical Resource Hub for guidance.
Cooley said she relayed Rittenbach’s instructions to quickly be seen by a glaucoma specialist. “I explained to the patient why he needed to have his angles checked and the urgency of not missing or delaying that appointment.”
“Ms. Cooley did a great job recognizing narrow angles on the patient,” Rittenbach said. “Unfortunately for the patient, he had severe chronic angle closure glaucoma that was never diagnosed or treated and so he needed emergency surgery. Her attention to detail and quality of care likely saved this Veteran from going completely blind.”
Don’t skip your routine eye screening. If there are no eye specialists near you, contact your local VA clinic to find out if they offer TECS appointments.
To learn more about VA TeleEye and other telehealth programs, visit the VA Telehealth website.
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This was a very informative and to-the-point story. Thank you for sharing.
I can not thank the V. A. enough for putting me with Dr. Conley. I had worn trifocals for years. Now for the past 5 or 6 years I wear no glasses and enjoy 20/20 vision. Jerry R Stewart
I go to my eye clinic once a year. It takes me one hour to drive there. The two Optometrist I have seen were professional and did a good examination of my eyes. I also selected a pair of eyeglasses while at the clinic.
Thanks for this up-dating.
There is no more eye care at my local VA Perry Point, MD. It has been no doctor to see me about my much needed eye care. I had the worse time getting permission to get to see someone outside VA. Once it goes to Care in the Community they never tell you it was approved and who and when you have an appointment. I have to see three separate eye doctors that Perry Point did all that I need with one visit. Please fix this.
My local primary care clinic informed me that it would not conduct routine eye exams.
This headline or local info is incorrect. Very disappointing.
Good luck getting a timely appointment. Columbia, SC is booked through Jan 2025
Great move by the VA. Efforts for rural vets are often lacking. Only wish that I could get my glasses prescription filled by mail instead of getting a local eye exam … but then having to travel hundreds of miles just to get new glasses.
I hope you vets who are elgible give it another try as I have found our VHA to have improved greatly from years ago. I’m SC for hearing as wefll as AO and I’ve been getting hearing aids for almost 20 years now. I recently went to VHA for my eyes. I was quite surprised at how good the care is- so is the selection of nice glasses. As with everything in life it pays to ask questions. My original audiologist was so-so but I found a wonderful new one that actually gives a damn and has helped me with my unusually difficult [and frustrating!] hearing. I used to swear I’d never get near the VHA again but I learned they can be great. Give it a shot.
When Lakeland fla. VA EYE CLINIC opening. I have WET MD in both eyes.
This sounds wonderful but the reality of VA eye at my local VA clinic ( Ft. Meade ) is it takes close to one year just to make an appointment and then I have to go to a different VA clinic ! VA needs more Dr. Thanks for listening!
At 69 I’ve concerned about my eyes and any condition trends that are present. I was seen at the TeCS in Canton,MI where I received a complete and thorough eye examination. The staff was wonderful and very competent and they provided feedback that was valuable.
Thank you to the VA for bringing these services to the local level.
So what are the eligibility requirements to be able to use this service?
I had an appointment with the VA approved doctor that did my Cataract surgery in 2023.My yearly follow up appt. was due in August 2024. I called the eye doctor to make sure it was approved and they called me back a few days later and informed me that it wasn’t and now we’re waiting for an approval from the community care dept in Dublin . It’s been almost a month. WTF is the problem ?
I am 88 yrs old. I have to wait 6 months for an appointment. I could be either blind or dead by then.
I need an eye exam as I’m starting to have double vision, BUT I am not allowed to have VA benefits because of a good year in the stock market, my adjusted gross income exceeds eligibility requirements.
sign me “military retired Viet Nam veteran”.
LTC George Andre, USAF
I am not even going to read this bullsh-t. Okay so I go to the Tucson VA. I have a cataract in my right eye. Hell I can’t even see shadows out of it. Okay so I don’t drive as cataracts influence your depth perception. They definitely decrease night vision. So I don’t see well
My hearing is just as poor. I was a M60 gunner for 6 or 7 months. Do you know how much hearing I have not a whole lot
Apparently all appointments and procedures are scheduled by computer. I have a 7 year old cell phone. I screen is small and so is the print. So scheduled appointments
Are not pleasant I am waiting on a refund on some series e bonds. I bought them while in the service 50 years ago. When I get my refund on them and with Medicare I will get my cataract done. Okay so make your pitch to a different individual.
I have not gotten my eyes save it is veery hard to do something and I will not except assistance from anyone after losing my home and one eye in jail
In Puerto Rico?
VA Hospital in San Juan has Eye Care Clinic.
I’ve been trying for two years to get my thyroid eye disease checked. I was diagnosed before I had VA health care. I’ve told the VA I’m having double vision so often that I can’t drive or read or see TV 2-3 times a week or more. I have custody of my 2 young grand children,one with special needs. Now what?!
Get a Annual eye exam…VA Optometrist really do a Excellent & very thorough…Lots of problems can be detected early..