GP2DRS (Diabetic eye screening programme)
Screening is the process of identifying people who appear healthy, but who may be at increased risk of a disease or condition. It's different to diagnosis and there will always be some false positive and false negative results.
Since 1 November 2020 CQRS has been managed by the NHS commissioning support units
Since 1 November 2020 CQRS has been managed by the NHS commissioning support units. Learn more about the services CQRS will offer.
Purpose and outline
Evidence shows that early identification and treatment of diabetic eye disease could reduce sight loss. The main treatment for diabetic retinopathy is laser surgery.
The eligible population for diabetic eye screening are people with type 1 and type 2 diabetes aged 12 or over. Those already under the care of an ophthalmology specialist for the condition are not invited for screening. The programme offers pregnant women with type 1 or type 2 diabetes additional tests because of the risk of developing retinopathy.
For full details about this service, visit the government website.
Read the GP2DRS Data Provision Notice
How this service is commissioned and provided
This service is commissioned by Public Health England.
Important information about this service
Quality service start date: Please contact your RLO
Quality service end date: Please contact your RLO
Payment period: No payment
Collection frequency: Monthly
Manual or automatic: Automatic
Included in data collection: All system suppliers (TPP, INPS, Microtest and Emis)
Co-commissioning: No
Service type: Non quality service for direct patient care.
Payment count/clinical codes
No payment attached.
Further information
This Diabetic eye screening data is collected to support early detection of diabetic retinopathy, helping to prevent sight loss. The GP2DRS system automatically shares relevant patient information from GP practices with local screening programmes to keep registers up to date and invite eligible patients for screening. Data is used only within the screening programme.
Last edited: 18 July 2022 2:56 pm