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One of the challenges of assessing patients for concussion in the urgent care center is that, most often, the examining clinician has had no previous contact with a given patient; there’s no baseline to compare their current condition against. A new piece published in the Journal of the American Medical Association brings news of a new tool that diminishes the importance of a baseline for patient who may have sustained a concussion, however. EyeBox, approved for use in both children and adults, tracks a patient’s eye movement as they watch a 4-minute video that moves clockwise around a computer monitor. Particular abnormalities in eye movement have been correlated with increased intracranial pressure and the likelihood of concussion. The FDA based its approval on a study of 282 patients at six independent U.S. sites. For insights into the role urgent care can play in assessing and treating patients suspected of having a concussion, read Concussion Management in Urgent Care: A Primer in the JUCM archive.

Another Tool in the Urgent Care Arsenal for Diagnosing Concussion