Introduction
Teleglaucoma is a new trend of glaucoma care in the era of artificial intelligence, cloud computing and telemedicine, allowing closer surveillance and halting disease progression as a consequence.1 Home-monitoring using visual field testing on personal devices plays a key role in the potential success of teleglaucoma and has been reported to be effective in detecting early changes of glaucoma visual field damage with acceptable compliance and promising results compared to those from in-clinic settings.2 Previously published home-monitoring visual field studies were conducted in developed countries (US,3 UK,4 Australia,5 Greece6). However, no data of at-home visual field testing in a developing setting has been published.
Some alternative visual field…