1. Evaluating patient acceptance of a teledermatology link of an urban urgent-care dermatology clinic run by residents with board certified dermatologists.
- Author
-
Scheinfeld N, Fisher M, Genis P, and Long H
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Ambulatory Care Facilities, Dermatology instrumentation, Female, Health Care Surveys, Humans, Internship and Residency, Male, Medical Staff, Hospital, Middle Aged, New York City, Photography, Remote Consultation, Urban Population, Dermatology methods, Emergency Service, Hospital organization & administration, Patient Acceptance of Health Care, Skin Diseases diagnosis, Telemedicine methods
- Abstract
Background: A teledermatology system was established in a dermatology urgent-care clinic staffed by dermatology residents in the emergency department. These residents had previously lacked attending dermatology supervision., Methods and Patients: Resident physicians took digital pictures of patients' lesions and downloaded the images onto a network personal computer (PC). The images were stored on the hospital's server and then viewed within 5 minutes by an attending dermatologist, in a different location, using a network PC with monitor. Resident and attending physicians discussed the cases over the telephone. Patient acceptance was assessed via separate written surveys. Fifty-one patients, approximately 10 resident physicians, and two attending dermatologists participated in the study., Results: Patient acceptance of the teledermatology system was high (93%). Teledermatology may prove a viable means of evaluating dermatologic complaints in the emergency department.
- Published
- 2003
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