Background: Internationally telemedicine has become an important element of health care. Up to now it plays, however, a minor role in the German health care system. Taking skin diseases as an example we examined over a 2‑year period whether teledermatology is appropriate to care for patients presenting to the emergency department (ED) with symptomatic skin diseases.
Methods: During 2016 and 2017, 190 patients aged between 18 and 88 years with skin diseases who presented to the ED of the University Medicine Greifswald (UMG) were cared for by a core team consisting of surgeons who were supported by the on-call dermatologist of the UMG via teledermatology (mSkin Doctor®, InfoKom, Neubrandeburg, Germany). Patients presented nearly exclusively outside the regular working hours: 59% on weekends and public holidays, 39% after 4 p.m. on working days. Furthermore, 33% of patients came from rural areas (<10,000 inhabitants), 41% from regional centres or mid-sized centres. Patients travelled 23 km (median) from their homes to the emergency department.
Results: In all, 59 of the 190 patients immediately assessed the teledermatology-based care they received in the emergency department: 76% of the patients felt that they had received adequate care, 81% trusted the medical decisions. The teledermatologically based care outside normal working hours was deemed appropriate by 68% of the patients; 32% of the patients, however, wanted the dermatologist to be present at any time at day and night.
Conclusion: Patients with skin diseases were cared for safely by the core team of the ED which was supported by the on-call dermatologist via teledermatology. The use of teledermatology within the context of emergency-based care has gained a high degree of patients' acceptance and confidence.
Keywords: Emergency department; Health care research; Health services research; Skin diseases; Telemedicine.