Synchronous Teledermoscopy in Military Treatment Facilities

Abstract Sustained demand for dermatologic care throughout military medicine, in conjunction with increasing dermatologic provider shortages, has led to increase use of teledermatology in military treatment facilities (MTFs). Initially used to aid in the differentiation of suspicious melanocytic les...

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Veröffentlicht in:Military medicine 2020-08, Vol.185 (7-8), p.e1334-e1337
Hauptverfasser: Day, William G, Shrivastava, Vikas, Roman, John W
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Sustained demand for dermatologic care throughout military medicine, in conjunction with increasing dermatologic provider shortages, has led to increase use of teledermatology in military treatment facilities (MTFs). Initially used to aid in the differentiation of suspicious melanocytic lesions, dermoscopy has found increasing clinical utility in an expanding realm of general dermatologic conditions. We demonstrate the use of synchronous teledermoscopy within a remote MTF by repurposing webcam technology already available at most MTFs. Two patients were seen in clinic at a remote naval primary care clinic with limited subspecialties. Once written consent was retrieved, an on-site dermatologist evaluated each patient and performed a history and skin exam with dermoscopy. Synchronous consultations were conducted with the Global Med Cart (GlobalMed(R) Clinical Access Station with TotalExam(R) 3 HDUSB camera), and Cisco webcam video jabber (Cisco TelePresence PrecisionHD USB Camera part number TTC8-03). The patients then underwent individual synchronous teledermatology consultations with an off-site U.S. Navy dermatologist located in the continental United States. The methodology for the consultation involved the use of a standard dermatoscope and jabber webcam. Two synchronous teledermatology consultations were completed successfully on patients in MTFs with limited subspecialty capabilities. Both cases, with two lesions of concern per case, had 100% concordance between the on-site and teleconsulted dermatologist. Through observing inter-rater agreements between the on-site and remote dermatologists, this small study demonstrates a novel application of technology readily available at most MTFs.
ISSN:0026-4075
1930-613X
DOI:10.1093/milmed/usz479