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Cell Phone Pictures May be the Next Medical Diagnostic Tool

ByKIM CAROLLO, ABC News Medical Unit
September 16, 2010, 5:29 PM

Sept. 17, 2010 -- Dr. Neal Sikka, an emergency room physician at George Washington University Medical Center, recalls an eye-opening incident that happened while he was away at a medical conference.

"My son fell and scraped his knee. My wife called, and I told her to take a picture and send it to me. She took a picture with her cell phone," said Sikka. "I looked at it, and told her how to clean it and take care of it."

Someone else Sikka knows once got paint in his eye. He called Sikka, who told him to send a picture of it.

"I was able to look at it and see the foreign body in his eye," said Sikka, who told the man what to do next.

Incidents like these spurred Sikka, who has worked extensively in the areas of telemedicine and remote medical provision, to undertake a six-month study assessing how accurately emergency medicine practitioners diagnose wounds based on photos taken by patients on their mobile phones.

The study involves people who arrive at George Washington University Medical Center's emergency room with non-life threatening flesh wounds. Once they are triaged, research assistants will determine whether they fit the study's criteria. Patients will then take pictures with their own cell phones, complete medical history questionnaires and e-mail the photos through a secure account.

A physician or physician assistant will then look at the photos and determine, based only on the photos, whether the patient needs stitches.

"The patient will then go back into the ER and when they're examined in person, we'll try to see how that diagnosis compares to the virtual diagnosis," said Sikka.

So far, about 100 people have participated in the study. Sikka said he hopes to enroll a total of somewhere between 250 and 500.

The researchers have only done a preliminary data analysis, but so far, Sikka said he's pleased with the results.

"The trends are really positive and the numbers are really encouraging," he said. "Doctors are really very accurate."

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