|
||||||||
|
||||||||
|
CUSTOM DERMATOLOGY SEARCH:
Loading
|
||||||||
Welcome to Skin Therapy Letter® US Family Practice EditionThe goal of this novel publication is to improve both diagnostic and therapeutic skills among primary care practitioners with regard to diseases and disorders of the skin, hair, and nails. The Editor and publishers feel that this is a critical educational endeavor, and one designed to improve overall patient care. Due to obvious constraints, graduate and primary care medical education often contain very limited exposure to or training in dermatology.1 Despite this, those who deliver primary care are frequently called upon to manage skin maladies. Consider these facts:
These trends will likely persist as awareness of skin disease increases among the general population due to professional educational campaigns, media influences, high-profile personalities developing skin cancer, and direct-to-consumer medical advertising. Limited direct access to board-certified dermatologists will also augment use of primary care services for skin care; direct dermatological access may be difficult due to managed care regulations and economic disincentives, very stringent documentation and preauthorization requirements, and a shortage of dermatologists in select geographic locales.7 The trend toward “cosmetic procedures only” practices further reduces the pool of dermatologists available for medical consultation and care. Despite the fact that primary care providers play a crucial role in delivery of cutaneous health care, there is ample evidence that they are inadequately trained in this field. Multiple comparative studies, summarized in a recent publication, clearly show a deficient ability of those in primary care to diagnose and treat skin disease in an optimal manner.8 Moreover, keeping abreast of the latest therapeutic advances in such a narrow discipline is difficult for those charged with the overall health and welfare of their patients. Thus, we have the genesis of Skin Therapy Letter. It is our hope that this streamlined publication and its associated internet site (www.SkinTherapyLetter.com) will serve as methods to rapidly enhance your diagnostic and/or therapeutic skills in the realm of cutaneous medicine, as well as to provide tools to help you decide when expeditious dermatological referral is the most judicious action to take.
Ted Rosen, MD
References
|
||||||||
|
All content ©2005-2012 SkinThearpyLetter® |
Last modified: Thursday, 21-Jun-2012 16:58:19 MDT
|
||||||||