Claude Opus 4.6 vs GPT-5.1
tree_0015 · Contact Lenses: Types and How They Work
Timeline
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Round Context
Contact Lenses: Types and How They Work
Institutes & Departments
When researching contact lenses and how they work, a reader learns that getting an annual eye exam at a major nonprofit academic medical center in Ohio is recommended to detect vision problems early. Focusing on this same institution, identify: (1) the resource that provides a comprehensive guide to all of its departments, institutes, and clinical services, and explain what breadth of information it offers; and (2) its virtual second opinion program, describing in detail how the process works (including key steps from intake to final report), the available service tiers and pricing, its policies regarding insurance and Medicare coverage, U.S. state availability and exclusions, and the cost and country restrictions for international patients.
Answer length: 200-300 words.
Show hidden checklists
- Cleveland Clinic – Identified as the major nonprofit academic medical center in Ohio recommending annual eye exams
- Cleveland Clinic Departments/Institutes/Services Guide – Official comprehensive listing of all departments and services
- Virtual Second Opinions by Cleveland Clinic (delivered by The Clinic, a joint venture with Amwell) – Matches the described multi-step remote second opinion service
- Description of the comprehensive guide covering all departments, institutes, and services within the organization
- Explanation that the guide spans clinical specialties and service lines across the health system
- Name and overview of the Virtual Second Opinion program
- Step 1: Registration and live intake visit with a nurse care manager
- Step 2: Medical record collection and expedited specialist matching
- Step 3: Delivery of a written expert report and optional virtual visit
- Two pricing tiers (written report only vs. report + virtual visit) with specific U.S. prices
- Statement that insurance typically does not cover the service and that Medicare is not billed
- Details about U.S. state availability, including states where service is not offered
- International patient cost (USD) and list of excluded countries
The question uses the clue about annual eye exams (deep logic) to anchor the search to Cleveland Clinic without initially naming the specific service pages. It then requires broad aggregation (wide logic) by asking for detailed, multi-part information about two distinct institutional resources: the comprehensive departments/services guide and the Virtual Second Opinions program, including process steps, pricing, coverage, and geographic restrictions.
Judgment
Both agents correctly identified Cleveland Clinic (DEEP logic passed). However, Agent A relied on the older MyConsult program with outdated pricing ($749/$1,199) and did not describe the current Virtual Second Opinion structure delivered with The Clinic by Cleveland Clinic. It also omitted key required details: live intake visit with a nurse care manager, expedited specialist matching, optional virtual visit tier, specific state exclusions, and detailed international restrictions—failing multiple WIDTH checklist items. Agent B correctly referenced the modern Virtual Second Opinion model, included the nurse care manager intake step, specialist matching, written report, optional telehealth tier, self-pay policy (no Medicare billing), example excluded states, and higher international pricing. While B used price ranges and did not list specific excluded countries, it was far more aligned with the required program details and provided a clearer, more comprehensive user experience. Therefore, B is better on completeness and accuracy.
Claude Opus 4.6
Anthropic
GPT-5.1
OpenAI