Journal of telemedicine and telecare
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Multicenter Study
A cohort study of acute plastic surgery trauma and burn referrals using telemedicine.
A store-and-forward telemedicine system was used to supplement normal telephone referrals to the plastic surgery unit at the Queen Victoria Hospital (QVH). During a 12-week prospective study, 11 units (8 hospitals and 3 minor injury units) with the telemedicine system and 10 units (8 hospitals and 2 minor injury units) without it regularly made referrals (at least 10) to the QVH. There were 389 referrals from the telemedicine-equipped units and 607 telephone referrals from the non-telemedicine units. ⋯ There was a significant difference in the management of patients when the telemedicine system was available, with more patients booked directly into day surgery and fewer attending for assessment. The burns unit and the day surgery unit demonstrated a significantly improved accuracy of triage. Telemedicine could have a valuable role to play in the triage and planning of acute plastic surgery referrals.
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We investigated the accuracy and usefulness of teleconsultation using the mobile phone multimedia messaging service (MMS) in emergency orthopaedic patients. Pictures of radiographs were taken using a built-in 1.3 megapixel mobile phone camera from a digital display screen in the emergency room and then transmitted to the camera phones of four assessors. The cases comprised 59 emergency orthopaedic patients diagnosed with non- or minimally displaced fractures and 34 age-matched normal patients visiting the emergency department. ⋯ The consequence of misdiagnosis would have resulted in mismanagement in up to 48% of the cases. No association was found between the experience of the assessors, the region of the fracture or the age group of the patients and the misdiagnosis rate. Teleconsultation via MMS demonstrated good reliability, but poor diagnostic accuracy which could have major consequences in emergency orthopaedic patients.