CPD Module

CPD Module

Driving Visual Fields: Austroads Interpretation and Reporting

A structured learning activity for clinicians who want to practise Austroads-aligned visual-field interpretation, then create a printable CPD Activity Completion Certificate for their CPD log.

Suggested completion time: about 60 minutes.

This is a self-directed learning activity. Suggested CPD domain: clinical performance and patient-safety learning. Record actual time and keep your own evidence according to your CPD requirements.

Learning objectives

Work through the four clinical modules, then finish the knowledge check and reflection note.

1/4 modules opened
  1. Identify when a printout has enough reliability, fixation, source, and point-level information for a driving-field opinion.
  2. Apply the Austroads horizontal-extent rules using seen-to-seen endpoints rather than estimated field contours.
  3. Classify central 20-degree missed-point patterns without treating all missed-point counts as equivalent.
  4. Recognise when device equivalence, roving Esterman, monocular status, or commercial licensing should trigger extra caution.
  5. Apply a consistent approach to reliability, horizontal extent, central defects, and special-case pathways before writing a driving-field report.

Module1/4

Is this field assessable?

10 minutes suggested

A clean-looking visual field is not useful for licensing if the source, layout, fixation, false positives, or point-level result is unclear.

Start by deciding whether the evidence is suitable for the question being asked. A binocular driving-field question needs a binocular Esterman or an accepted Esterman-equivalent field. A monocular standard automated perimetry (SAP) test can be useful baseline evidence, but it is not the same task as a binocular driving-field assessment when a significant defect or progressive condition is present.

Reliability is not optional. Fixation observation or monitoring must be performed and recorded for a standard Esterman/equivalent pathway, and false positives must be within the accepted reliability gate. If those fields are blank or unclear, the safest clinical report says the evidence is unresolved rather than converting a clean-looking plot into favourable advice.

Assessability checks

  1. Confirm the field was binocular when a binocular driving-field standard is being applied.
  2. Check field layout, printout source, point count, false-positive rate or count, and fixation observation or monitoring.
  3. If reliability or point-layout evidence is missing, the app should not call it a pass. Coordinate-confirmed named non-Humphrey devices can be calculated on their matching layouts, while unconfirmed printouts need repeat testing, manual review, or case-specific judgement before relying on them.

Inline practice case

No fixation monitoring recorded

5 minutes

Review the embedded reliability case. Decide whether it can be assessed, then write one sentence documenting why it is sufficient or why it needs repeat/manual review.

A standard Esterman printout has low false positives and all points seen, but fixation monitoring was not performed or not recorded.

Visual field

Inspect before reveal
10°20°30°40°50°60°70°80°SuperiorInferiorLR±10° horizontal measurement zone+10°-10°
Seen 120Missed 0

Your answer

Classify this field before revealing the answer
Reliability
Final classification
Main rule theme

Module 1 is open. Continue to Module 2 when ready.

Next step

Continue through the modules first

The final knowledge check will appear after all four modules have been opened. Use the module navigation above to continue in order.

1/4 modules opened

References