| Literature DB >> 21346951 |
Michael F Chiang1, Lu Wang, David Kim, Karen Scott, Grace Richter, Steven Kane, John Flynn, Justin Starren.
Abstract
Telemedicine has potential to improve quality and delivery of medical care, particularly in image-oriented specialties where decisions are based on appearance of morphological features during examination. In the ophthalmology domain, nearly all published telemedicine studies have measured accuracy against a gold standard of ophthalmoscopic examination. The purposes of this study are to examine difficulties in defining an absolute gold standard and to compare diagnostic speed in a representative disease, retinopathy of prematurity. We compare results from ophthalmoscopic and telemedicine examinations by the same physicians. In 180 (86.5%) of 208 eyes, the two examinations produced the same diagnosis. In some discrepancies, there was rationale suggesting that telemedicine may have provided a more accurate diagnosis than ophthalmoscopic examination. The quantity and nature of these disagreements has important implications for evaluation of telemedicine systems in image-based specialties, and for the definition of gold standards in future studies.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21346951 PMCID: PMC3041451
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AMIA Annu Symp Proc ISSN: 1559-4076