Faculty of Medicine, University of Porto, 4200-319 Porto, Portugal.
Unit of Anatomy, Department of Biomedicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Porto, Alameda Professor Hernâni Monteiro, 4200-319 Porto, Portugal.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2022 Jun 14;19(12):7304. doi: 10.3390/ijerph19127304.
Technological advancements in smartphones have made it possible to create high-quality medical photographs, with the potential to revolutionise patient care. To ensure the security of the patient’s data, it is important that medical professionals receive informed consent from the patient, that physical conditions are met to take a photograph, and that these medical images are stored correctly. This study aimed to determine if medical professionals of an academic hospital make use of medical photography, and how the content is obtained, stored, transferred, and used. Methods: A 30-question questionnaire was distributed across 29 medical departments at Centro Hospitalar Universitário de São João (CHUSJ), a tertiary referral and teaching hospital in Porto, Portugal, with approximately 900 medical professionals. Quantitative statistical methods were used to analyse questionnaire responses. Results: There were a total of 257 respondents. Of these, 93% used medical photography, 70% used it to document a patient’s clinical progress, 70% to ask for a second opinion, 56% for education, 65% for research and publication, and 68% to present at medical conferences. Medical photography was used by 33% weekly and 36% monthly, with 71% of respondents always asking for the patients’ consent before taking a photograph. Doctors aged 20−40 years used photography more often than doctors over 40 years of age to document the clinical progress of the patients (77% and 52%, respectively, p = 0.01) and to ask for a second opinion (78% and 52%, respectively, p < 0.001). Conclusions: Our study shows that medical photography is a common practice amongst medical doctors. However, appropriate measures need to be created to obtain patients’ consent, store images, and sure the security of patients’ information.
智能手机的技术进步使得拍摄高质量的医学照片成为可能,这有可能彻底改变患者的护理方式。为了确保患者数据的安全,重要的是,医疗专业人员需要获得患者的知情同意,需要满足拍摄照片的物理条件,并正确存储这些医学图像。本研究旨在确定学术医院的医疗专业人员是否使用医学摄影,以及内容是如何获取、存储、传输和使用的。
在葡萄牙波尔图的三级转诊和教学医院 Centro Hospitalar Universitário de São João (CHUSJ) 的 29 个医学部门分发了一份 30 个问题的问卷,共有约 900 名医疗专业人员参与。使用定量统计方法分析问卷的回复。
共有 257 名受访者。其中,93%的人使用医学摄影,70%的人使用它来记录患者的临床进展,70%的人使用它来征求第二意见,56%的人使用它来进行教育,65%的人使用它来进行研究和发表,68%的人使用它在医学会议上展示。33%的人每周使用医学摄影,36%的人每月使用医学摄影,71%的受访者总是在拍摄照片前征得患者同意。20-40 岁的医生比 40 岁以上的医生更频繁地使用摄影来记录患者的临床进展(分别为 77%和 52%,p = 0.01),并征求第二意见(分别为 78%和 52%,p < 0.001)。
我们的研究表明,医学摄影是医生的常见做法。然而,需要制定适当的措施来获得患者的同意、存储图像并确保患者信息的安全。