Whited J et al. 2002 "Teledermatology's impact on time to intervention among referrals to a dermatology consult service."

Reference
Whited J, Hall R, Foy M, et al. Teledermatology's impact on time to intervention among referrals to a dermatology consult service. Telemed J E Health 2002;8(3):313-321.
Abstract
"The aim of this study was to determine if a teledermatology consult system, using store-and-forward digital imaging technology, results in patients achieving a shorter time from referral date to date of initial definitive intervention when compared to a traditional referral process. Patients being referred to the dermatology consult service from the primary care clinics at the Durham VA Medical Center were randomized to either a teledermatology consultation or usual care. A usual care consultation consisted of a text-based electronic consult request. A teledermatology consultation included digital images and a standardized history, in addition to the text-based electronic consult. Time to initial definitive intervention was defined as the time between referral date and the date the patient was scheduled for a clinic visit for those patients that the consultant requested a clinic-based evaluation, or the time between referral date and the date the consult was answered by the consultant if a clinic visit was not required. Patients in the teledermatology arm of the study reached a time to initial definitive intervention significantly sooner than did those patients randomized to usual care (median 41 days versus 127 days, p = 0.0001, log-rank test). Additionally, 18.5% of patients in the teledermatology arm avoided the need for a dermatology clinic-based visit compared to zero patients avoiding a dermatology clinic visit in the usual care arm of the study (p < 0.001, z-test). Teledermatology consult systems can result in significantly shorter times to initial definitive intervention for patients compared to traditional consult modalities, and, in some cases, the need for a clinic-based visit can be avoided."
Objective
"To determine if a teledermatology consult system, using store-and-forward digital imaging technology, results in patients achieving a shorter time for referral date to date of initial definitive intervention when compared to a traditional referral process."
Type Clinic
Primary care and specialty care
Size
Large
Other Information
Patient data is sent from Veterans Administration (VA) clinics to the VA medical center for consultation.
Type of Health IT
Telemedicine
Electronic medical records (EMR)
Context or other IT in place
Electronic medical records (EMR)
Workflow-Related Findings
"25 of 135 patients or 18.5% in the teledermatology group were not scheduled for a clinic based visit" (as opposed to 0 in the control group).
"Patients in the teledermatology group reached a time to initial definitive intervention significantly sooner than did those patients in the usual care group (median 41 days versus 127 days, p= 0.0001)."
"The probability that a patient will have an initial definitive intervention prior to 50 days is 53% for the teledermatology group also reached a time to initial definitive intervention significantly sooner than conventional patients (median 50 days versus 137.5 days, p=0.0027). The Kaplan-Meier probability that the patient will have an initial definitive intervention prior to 50 days is 50% in the teledermatology group compared to 29% in the usual care group. The probability that a patient will have an initial definitive intervention prior to 90 days is 61% for teledermatology compared to 42% in the usual care group."
"The time to a scheduled clinic visit did not differ (median 139 days versus 127 days, p=0.39, log-rank test) between eligible nonenrolled patients and enrolled usual care patients (intension to treat analysis)."
Study Design
Randomized controlled trial (RCT)
Study Participants
The study participants included 275 patients (140 usual care, 135 teledermatology), three residents, and one dermatologist.