Trial of low-cost teledermatology in primary care

We examined the feasibility of a low-cost, store-and-forward teledermatology service for general practitioners (GPs) in regional Queensland. Digital pictures and a brief case history were transmitted by email. A service coordinator carried out quality control checks and then forwarded these email messages to a consultant dermatologist. On receiving a clinical response from the dermatologist, the service coordinator returned the message to the referring GP. The aim was to provide advice to rural GPs within one working day. Over six months, 63 referrals were processed by the teledermatology service, covering a wide range of dermatological conditions. In the majority of cases the referring doctors were able to treat the condition after receipt of email advice from the dermatologist; however, in 10 cases (16%) additional images or biopsy results were requested because image quality was inadequate. The average time between a referral being received and clinical advice being provided to the referring GPs was 46 hours. The number of referrals in the present study, 1.05 per month per site, was similar to that reported in other primary care studies. While the use of low-cost digital cameras and public email is feasible, there may be other issues, for example remuneration, which will militate against the widespread introduction of primary care teledermatology in Australia.

[1]  Griffiths,et al.  Comparison of teleconsultations and face‐to‐face consultations: preliminary results of a United Kingdom multicentre teledermatology study , 1998, The British journal of dermatology.

[2]  Lansing G. Ellsworth,et al.  Diagnostic accuracy and image quality using a digital camera for teledermatology. , 1999, Telemedicine journal : the official journal of the American Telemedicine Association.

[3]  L. Drage,et al.  Assessment of the accuracy of low-cost store-and-forward teledermatology consultation. , 2000, Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology.

[4]  J. Post,et al.  Teledermatology as a tool for communication between general practitioners and dermatologists , 2001, Journal of telemedicine and telecare.

[5]  C. L. Wen,et al.  Web site for training nonmedical health-care workers to identify potentially malignant skin lesions and for teledermatology. , 2002, Telemedicine journal and e-health : the official journal of the American Telemedicine Association.

[6]  L. Machet [Multicentre randomised control trial comparing real time teledermatology with conventional outpatient dermatological care: societal cost-benefit analysis]. , 2002, Annales de dermatologie et de venereologie.

[7]  J. Whited,et al.  An economic analysis of a store and forward teledermatology consult system. , 2003, Telemedicine journal and e-health : the official journal of the American Telemedicine Association.

[8]  M. Du Moulin,et al.  The reliability of diagnosis using store-and-forward teledermatology , 2003, Journal of telemedicine and telecare.