Evaluation of the Amblyopia tracker app
Anna R. O’Connor, Ashli Warburton, Martha Farrelly-Waters, Laura England, Rachel Clarke, Hazel Kay

TL;DR
The Amblyopia tracker app allows parents to monitor their child's vision at home during amblyopia treatment, showing promising feasibility and usability.
Contribution
The study evaluates the feasibility and reliability of a home-based vision monitoring app for amblyopia treatment by parents.
Findings
No statistically significant differences were found in repeated home tests or between home and clinical measurements.
Variability in results suggests the need for further improvements to ensure reliability as a clinical tool.
Parents reported high usability and willingness to use the app if available.
Abstract
The Amblyopia tracker app has been developed to be a tool for parents to monitor changes in vision at home during amblyopia treatment. The aims of this study were to evaluate the feasibility and repeatability of parents testing their children at home and to compare home test results to an assessment in clinic by an orthoptist. Children (age < 18 years) with amblyopia (interocular acuity difference of ≥ 0.2logMAR) were recruited. Parents were asked to test their child with the app three times during a two week period followed by an online questionnaire about the usability. Participants also tested within 48 h of their appointment where the measurement was repeated by an orthoptist. Out of 277 potential participants contacted, 37 completed three home measurements, mean age 6.8 years (SD 2.94). Home tests comparisons were made between test two and three to ensure familiarity with the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOphthalmology and Visual Impairment Studies · Virtual Reality Applications and Impacts · Visual perception and processing mechanisms
