At a glance
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Teledermatology Mobile Apps: Implementation and Impact on Veterans' Access to Dermatology
In Brief
An observational study evaluating Direct to patient facing mobile apps introduction for Introduction of Teledermatology Mobile Apps. Completed, enrolled 466 participants across 3 sites.
Detailed Summary
This study was designed to measure the impact of two teledermatology apps to provide direct to patient teledermatology follow up care, Patient Viewer and My VA Images, with a trial on access to dermatology care. The overall hypothesis was that sites implementing Department of Veterans Affairs' (VA) teledermatology mobile apps would significantly augment the use of teledermatology and improve Veterans' access to skin care relative to control sites. Specifically, the investigators hypothesized that these apps would improve established patients' ability to follow-up with dermatology care remotely, reducing patient travel to dermatology clinics while opening up dermatology clinic space for other patients. Due to a lack of participation by sites during the study which was conducted during the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, the groups examined are Veterans who live in rural areas compared to those in urban areas. Previously the study included a parallel trial to evaluate another teledermatology mobile app, VA Telederm. This trial was no longer feasible within this study's funding timeline due to limitations imposed on the mobile app by Office of Information \& Technology that were not under the control of the PI or the operational partner, Office of Connected Care (OCC).
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
VA employees and Veterans begin use of OCC's direct to patient facing mobile app.