Telemedicine model for training non-medical persons in the early recognition of melanoma

summary A Web-based educational model, called JUTE, was developed for the early diagnosis of melanoma. It was compared with a control Website composed of information available on the Internet for teaching undergraduate medical students. The JUTE model was designed to allow the student linear navigation of the main topics that were assumed to be important in learning to make a diagnosis. The rate of success in correctly deciding to refer pigmented lesions to a dermatologist was compared among 34 new medical students who were randomly divided into two groups. There was no significant difference between the JUTE and control groups in the pre-test. When comparing the pre- and post-tests, the number of correct decisions increased significantly only in the JUTE group. In the JUTE group there was a slight but significant improvement when comparing decisions about thin melanoma before and after the training. The educational approach chosen for the JUTE Website appears to be useful for teaching the early recognition of melanoma and could be used for larger educational campaigns of skin cancer prevention.

[1]  J Sybil Biermann,et al.  Melanoma information on the Internet: often incomplete--a public health opportunity? , 2002, Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

[2]  A. Sober,et al.  An estimate of the annual direct cost of treating cutaneous melanoma. , 1998, Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology.

[3]  A. Kopf,et al.  Early detection of malignant melanoma: The role of physician examination and self‐examination of the skin , 1985, CA: a cancer journal for clinicians.

[4]  A. Jemal,et al.  Recent trends in cutaneous melanoma incidence among whites in the United States. , 2001, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.