The majority of skin lesions in pediatric primary care attention could be managed by Teledermatology

Teledermatology is a tool that provides accurate diagnosis and has been gaining more emphasis over time. It can be used for triage in primary care attention to address skin conditions improving access and reducing time to treatment for surgical, severe or even lethal diseases. Our main goal was to e...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2019-12, Vol.14 (12), p.e0225479-e0225479
Hauptverfasser: Giavina Bianchi, Mara, Santos, Andre Pires, Cordioli, Eduardo
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description Teledermatology is a tool that provides accurate diagnosis and has been gaining more emphasis over time. It can be used for triage in primary care attention to address skin conditions improving access and reducing time to treatment for surgical, severe or even lethal diseases. Our main goal was to evaluate the proportion of pediatric patient's lesions that could be managed using teledermatology in primary care attention. Secondly, we wanted to assess the ten most frequent skin conditions, the most common treatments and the referrals made by the teledermatologists to biopsy, in-presence dermatologist or kept at primary care attention. A cross-sectional retrospective study involving 6,879 individuals and 10,126 lesions was conducted by store-and-forward teledermatology during one year in the city of Sao Paulo, Brazil. If the photographs taken had enough quality, teledermatologist would diagnose, treat and orient each lesion (if possible), and choose one of three options for referral: direct to biopsy, in-presence dermatologist or kept at primary care attention. Teledermatology managed 62% of the lesions to be kept at primary care attention, 37% were referred to dermatologists and 1% to biopsy, reducing the mean waiting time for an in-presence visit in 78%. In patients 0-2 years old, lesions related to eczema and benign congenital lesions predominated. From 3-12 years old, eczema was still a major cause of complaint, as well as warts and molluscum. From 13-19 years old, acne was the most significant problem, followed by atopic dermatitis, nevi and warts. The most frequent treatment was emollient. Teletriage addressed 63% of the lesions without the need for an in-presence visit, suggesting that teledermatology can manage common diseases and optimize dermatological appointments for the most serious, surgical or complex skin illnesses, reducing the mean waiting time for them.
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It can be used for triage in primary care attention to address skin conditions improving access and reducing time to treatment for surgical, severe or even lethal diseases. Our main goal was to evaluate the proportion of pediatric patient's lesions that could be managed using teledermatology in primary care attention. Secondly, we wanted to assess the ten most frequent skin conditions, the most common treatments and the referrals made by the teledermatologists to biopsy, in-presence dermatologist or kept at primary care attention. A cross-sectional retrospective study involving 6,879 individuals and 10,126 lesions was conducted by store-and-forward teledermatology during one year in the city of Sao Paulo, Brazil. If the photographs taken had enough quality, teledermatologist would diagnose, treat and orient each lesion (if possible), and choose one of three options for referral: direct to biopsy, in-presence dermatologist or kept at primary care attention. Teledermatology managed 62% of the lesions to be kept at primary care attention, 37% were referred to dermatologists and 1% to biopsy, reducing the mean waiting time for an in-presence visit in 78%. In patients 0-2 years old, lesions related to eczema and benign congenital lesions predominated. From 3-12 years old, eczema was still a major cause of complaint, as well as warts and molluscum. From 13-19 years old, acne was the most significant problem, followed by atopic dermatitis, nevi and warts. The most frequent treatment was emollient. Teletriage addressed 63% of the lesions without the need for an in-presence visit, suggesting that teledermatology can manage common diseases and optimize dermatological appointments for the most serious, surgical or complex skin illnesses, reducing the mean waiting time for them.</abstract><cop>United States</cop><pub>Public Library of Science</pub><pmid>31790453</pmid><doi>10.1371/journal.pone.0225479</doi><tpages>e0225479</tpages><orcidid>https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7059-4068</orcidid><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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subjects Acne
Adolescent
Atopic dermatitis
Biopsy
Brazil
Care and treatment
Child
Child health
Child, Preschool
Cross-Sectional Studies
Dermatitis
Dermatologic agents
Dermatology
Dermatology - methods
Dermatology - organization & administration
Eczema
Einstein, Albert (1879-1955)
Emollients - therapeutic use
Epidemiology
Female
Fungal infections
Genetic disorders
Health care
Health care policy
Hospitals
Humans
Illnesses
Infant
Infant, Newborn
Lesions
Male
Medical treatment
Medicine and Health Sciences
Mollusks
Patient satisfaction
Patients
Pediatrics
Physicians
Primary care
Primary Health Care - methods
Primary Health Care - organization & administration
Public health
Referral and Consultation - organization & administration
Retrospective Studies
Skin
Skin - pathology
Skin diseases
Skin Diseases - diagnosis
Skin Diseases - drug therapy
Skin Diseases - pathology
Skin lesions
Surgery
Systematic review
Telemedicine
Telemedicine - methods
Telemedicine - organization & administration
Triage - methods
Triage - organization & administration
Warts
Young Adult
title The majority of skin lesions in pediatric primary care attention could be managed by Teledermatology
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