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A targeted response to the COVID‐19 pandemic: analysing effectiveness of remote consultations for triage and management of routine dermatology referrals

Emma Corden, A. K. Rogers, W. A. Woo, R. J. Simmonds, Charles D. Mitchell

2020Clinical and Experimental Dermatology17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

During the UK's COVID-19 pandemic lockdown there was national guidance to suspend routine dermatology work. As a consequence, over 800 patient appointments in a district general dermatology department were temporarily suspended. Remote consultations were carried out to triage and manage referrals, via telephone or video consultations. Data were prospectively recorded on 488 patient interactions. Outcomes included advice/treatment, discharge, surgery or clinic review; 25% of patients were either uncontactable or their problem had resolved. Over a third of referrals were discharged with advice/treatment initiated remotely; 56% of referred dermatoses required further clinical review; 25% of lesion referrals were booked directly to surgery. This process was time-intensive for the clinicians involved, and triage mechanisms could be improved. Sufficient referral information allows remote diagnosis; implementation of management plans and appropriate discharge of patients. This process has been shown to be feasible, and may be a temporary solution for other COVID-19 impacted dermatology departments.

Topics & Concepts

TriageMedicineReferralTeledermatologyPandemicCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Medical emergencyTelemedicineMEDLINEEmergency medicineFamily medicinePathologyHealth careDiseaseLawPolitical scienceEconomicsInfectious disease (medical specialty)Economic growthCOVID-19 and healthcare impactsCutaneous Melanoma Detection and ManagementCutaneous lymphoproliferative disorders research
A targeted response to the COVID‐19 pandemic: analysing effectiveness of remote consultations for triage and management of routine dermatology referrals | Litcius