| Information |
| Corporate Profile |
| Medical Device Information |
| Terms and Conditions |
| Document Download Area |
| Request Information |
| Jobs |
| Search |
| How to Find Us |

Dermatology e-Referal Literature
Dermatology e-Referral Literature
Radiology e-Referral Literature
Abstracts:
Teledermatology and teledermatopathology
Telemedicine versus in-person dermatology referrals: an analysis of case complexity.
The effect of decreasing digital image resolution on teledermatology diagnosis.
Literature Review: Dermatology e-Referral (Teledermatology)
![]()
Teledermatology in the Waikato region of New Zealand.
Oakley A, Rademaker M, Duffill M.
J Telemed Telecare. 2001;7 Suppl 2:59-61.
Department of Dermatology, Health Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand. oakley at wave.co.nz
Teledermatology consultations over a video-link began at
Health Waikato in 1995. Clinical trials involving about 500 patients have
demonstrated the diagnostic accuracy and economic gains of these teleconsultations,
and patient satisfaction with them. Yet, six years on, out-of-date equipment
remains under-used. There has been no expansion of the network and no additional
clinical teleconsultation services. Possible reasons include the excessive
capital cost of videoconferencing equipment, clinician overwork, inconvenience,
lack of reimbursement, administrative and governmental inertia, and little
demand from patients and their doctors. To widen our referral base without
the inconvenience of videoconferencing, we decided to offer a secure browser-based
dermatology tele-advice service to referring general practitioners who owned
digital cameras. With the increase in online health information and electronic
communication, we assumed it would be popular. But, despite up to six-month
waits for patients to be seen in the dermatology outpatient clinic, few patients
have been referred to the service. Explanations have included time constraints,
unavailability of a camera, no Internet access at the time of consultation
and lack of reimbursement. Can we look forward to a future in which all doctors
have high-speed access to the Internet at their desktop through their practice
management systems? Who will pay? Will they continue to prefer conventional
referral?