|
New Review Article Teledermoscopy – An Emerging Technology for Skin Cancer Detection
Authors Kristen Delans, Elianna Goldstein, Dr. Beth Goldstein, Dr. James Grichnik, Dr. Adam Goldstein https://doi.org/10.30953/thmt.v8.376
Dermatology is facing an increasing scarcity of providers since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. With lengthening waiting periods for skin cancer screening examinations, there is a need for alternatives to in-person evaluation. Delayed diagnosis is associated with poorer outcomes - especially in melanoma. Teledermatology has the potential to prevent the increased morbidity and mortality associated with late-stage diagnosis, especially when utilized with
dermoscopy.
Teledermoscopy has exhibited accuracy and reliability comparable to face-to-face visits and is a promising alternative for those who require triage or for patients who are unable to access in-person care (rural, underserved populations). With standardization, use at-home or in primary care offices may relieve some of the pressure on an overburdened dermatologic care system and help patients who require urgent care to be seen
more expediently.
Many of the findings reported in preliminary studies are promising, as they establish a possible role for teledermoscopy in bridging the care gap left by staffing shortages in communities. A new urgency to triage complaints and allocate in-person visits to those who truly require FTF treatment has presented. While not a replacement for FTF total body skin examinations, teledermoscopy is an attractive tool to decrease the
burden of identifying skin cancers and improve screening. Teledermoscopy implementation may reduce unnecessary biopsies by enabling home monitoring of suspicious lesions. It may also increase the overall cost-efficiency of dermatologic care by reducing the number of unnecessary in-person visits for clearly benign skin lesions.
To learn more please visit https://doi.org/10.30953/thmt.v8.376 |
Telehealth and Medicine Today (THMT) is published by Partners in Digital Health. The journal examines the value of telehealth and clinical automation, computational health science, its use and scalable developments, business process guidance, immersive
patient experiences, market research, and the economic impact of digital health innovations advancing value based care across the care continuum. Original research articles and reviews feature perspectives from multiple disciplines including medicine, technology, policy, economic, education and social impact disciplines. Authors are encouraged to submit outcomes data to demonstrate real world cost efficiencies that enhance affordable, accessible, quality care through virtual and digital
treatment modalities. Submit your Manuscript here: https://telehealthandmedicinetoday.com/index.php/journal/about/submissions
THMT Ambassador Application, go to: https://telehealthandmedicinetoday.com/index.php/journal/ambassador
Don’t miss another issue! Your FREE SUBSCRIPTION is waiting at https://telehealthandmedicinetoday.com/index.php/journal/user/register |
|
|
|