Bloemen Elizabeth M, Rosen Tony, Cline Schiroo Justina A, Clark Sunday, Mulcare Mary R, Stern Michael E, Mysliwiec Regina, Flomenbaum Neal E, Lachs Mark S, Hargarten Stephen
Division of Emergency Medicine, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY.
Division of Geriatric and Palliative Medicine, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY.
Acad Emerg Med. 2016 May;23(5):653-9. doi: 10.1111/acem.12955. Epub 2016 Apr 13.
Photographing injuries in the acute setting allows for improved documentation as well as assessment by clinicians and others who have not personally examined a patient. This tool is important, particularly for telemedicine, tracking of wound healing, the evaluation of potential abuse, and injury research. Despite this, protocols to ensure standardization of photography in clinical practice, forensics, or research have not been published. In preparation for a study of injury patterns in elder abuse and geriatric falls, our goal was to develop and evaluate a protocol for standardized photography of injuries that may be broadly applied.
We conducted a literature review for techniques and standards in medical, forensic, and legal photography. We developed a novel protocol describing types of photographs and body positioning for eight body regions, including instructional diagrams. We revised it iteratively in consultation with experts in medical photography; forensics; and elder, child, and domestic abuse. The resulting protocol requires a minimum of four photos of each injury at multiple distances with and without a ruler/color guide. To evaluate the protocol's efficacy, multiple research assistants without previous photography experience photographed injuries from a convenience sample of elderly patients presenting to a single large, urban, academic emergency department. A selection of these patients' images were then evaluated in a blinded fashion by four nontreating emergency medicine physicians and the inter-rater reliability between these physicians was calculated.
Among the 131 injuries, from 53 patients, photographed by 18 photographers using this protocol, photographs of 25 injuries (10 bruises, seven lacerations, and eight abrasions) were used to assess characterization of the injury. Physicians' characterizations of the injuries were reliable for the size of the injury (κ = 0.91, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.77 to 1.00), side of the body (κ = 0.97, 95% CI = 0.88 to 1.00), precise location of the injury (κ = 0.74, 95% CI = 0.63 = 0.81), and type of abrasion (κ = 0.76, 95% CI = 0.45 to 1.00). The exact shape of the injury (κ = 0.44, 95% CI = 0.17 to 0.51), and the primary color of bruises (κ = 0.37, 95% CI = 0.25 to 0.48) were not as reliably characterized.
Standardizing the documentation of injuries with photographs for clinical and research assessment can be conducted by nonprofessional photographers. A photography protocol will ensure that this important mechanism for documentation is optimized.
在急性情况下拍摄损伤情况有助于改善记录,也便于临床医生及其他未亲自检查患者的人员进行评估。这一工具很重要,特别是对于远程医疗、伤口愈合跟踪、潜在虐待评估及损伤研究而言。尽管如此,尚未有确保临床实践、法医或研究中摄影标准化的方案发表。为准备一项关于虐待老人和老年人跌倒损伤模式的研究,我们的目标是制定并评估一项可广泛应用的损伤标准化摄影方案。
我们对医学、法医和法律摄影的技术与标准进行了文献综述。我们制定了一项新颖的方案,描述了八个身体部位的照片类型和身体姿势,包括示意图。我们与医学摄影、法医以及老人、儿童和家庭虐待方面的专家协商,对其进行了反复修订。最终方案要求对每处损伤在有和没有尺子/颜色指南的情况下,从多个距离至少拍摄四张照片。为评估该方案的有效性,多名此前无摄影经验的研究助理对来自一家大型城市学术急诊科的老年患者便利样本的损伤进行了拍摄。然后,由四名非治疗急诊科医生以盲法对这些患者的部分图像进行评估,并计算这些医生之间的评分者间信度。
在18名摄影师使用该方案拍摄的53名患者的131处损伤中,25处损伤(10处瘀伤、7处裂伤和8处擦伤)的照片被用于评估损伤特征。医生对损伤大小(κ = 0.91,95%置信区间[CI] = 0.77至1.00)、身体部位(κ = 0.97,95%CI = 0.88至1.00)、损伤精确位置(κ = 0.74,95%CI = 0.63至0.81)以及擦伤类型(κ = 0.76,95%CI = 0.45至1.00)的特征描述具有可靠性。损伤的确切形状(κ = 0.44,95%CI = 0.17至0.51)和瘀伤的主要颜色(κ = 0.37,95%CI = 0.25至)的特征描述可靠性较差。
非专业摄影师可为临床和研究评估对损伤记录进行标准化摄影。摄影方案将确保这一重要的记录机制得到优化。