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How well do family physicians manage skin lesions?

 

Practice recommendation

Family physicians can feel comfortable that most patients whom they treat with skin disorders improve (B).

The bite of a brown recluse spider is dangerous, leading to necrosis and possibly death, right? That supposition is widely held and backed by studies.1,2 In fact, conventional wisdom says if a person is bitten by a brown recluse spider, serious complications are the norm and the best course of action is aggressive treatment in a hospital.

The studies supporting this view, however, were conducted in tertiary care settings, which do not always represent primary care settings.3,4 When Cacy and Mold5 examined the characteristics of brown recluse spider bites in outpatient settings, they found that 43% of patients healed within 2 weeks and only 1 in 149 patients required hospitalization.

Is it likely other skin disorders seen in primary care also have clinical courses more favorable than when seen in tertiary care centers? This was one of our hypotheses, and we structured our study to determine the percentage of the skin lesions that improved after evaluation and management by family physicians.

How do FPs compare with dermatologists?

Dermatology literature boasts about the superiority of the dermatologist in diagnostic ability, cost savings, and cancer prevention when compared with primary care physicians.6-10 Studies have evaluated the skill level of primary care physicians compared with dermatologists in identifying skin disorders when tested with color transparencies, computer images, and slides—however, rarely with actual patients.7,9-16 Some studies have suggested a higher rate of referral for skin problems than for other non-dermatologic conditions.14,17,18

Often the outcome of interest in these studies is disease-oriented, judging a physician’s diagnostic ability, rather than examining a patient-oriented outcome, such as resolution of lesion or patient satisfaction.

Thus, the secondary aims of our study were to observe how family physicians diagnose and treat the lesions, and to gauge their concordance with dermatologists’ assessments and plans. We hypothesized that, in an office setting, family physicians would provide effective and efficient treatment for most patients who present with new skin lesions, and that there is high diagnostic concordance between the 2 specialties.

We first share our study findings, and then provide details of our Methodology and Results.

Family physicians excel at dermatologic care

Our study demonstrates that most skin conditions diagnosed and managed by family physicians improve. At day 7, 84% of patients who were contacted reported their skin lesions were “better” or “much better.” Moreover, patients said they were highly satisfied with their care. Referrals to subspecialists were infrequent.

These findings counter those from previous studies questioning primary care physicians’ care of dermatologic conditions. We believe it is likely that patients in previous studies reflected different populations than are typically seen by family physicians.18-20 Another difference may be that family physicians used other resources to assist with their diagnosis and treatment decisions. As we hypothesized, family physicians had good correlation with dermatologists in both diagnosis and treatment, and skin lesions improved.

Important study limitations

We relied on patient reports of improvement. While-self impression of degree of improvement is a patient-centered outcome, there may be instances in which inappropriate or insufficient treatment may produce temporary symptomatic relief and mask true improvement.

Although the patients’ primary care physicians were not involved in the follow-up process, it is possible they felt some social pressure to report higher levels of improvement or satisfaction.

Though we attempted to enroll all eligible patients, some patients seen for skin conditions may not have been captured. As we met our planned enrollment rates, we believe we captured most of the eligible encounters.

Some studies have questioned primary care physicians’ abilities to properly diagnose skin cancers.21,22 Our study was not designed or powered to detect skin cancers or the number, if any, of missed diagnoses of skin cancer.

Cues for teachers of family medicine

Most diagnoses fell within a limited set of diagnostic categories that probably reflect a distribution of skin disorders more typical within family medicine than in dermatology clinics. This range of disease defines a set of diagnostic skills, information resources, and treatment plans required to make these diagnoses and manage these conditions in family practice settings. This information should help physicians involved in training family physicians to concentrate on these common categories of diagnoses. Most important, our study conducted with actual patients found that family physicians manage skin lesions effectively and efficiently, with high patient satisfaction.

 

Methods

Study design and participants

We conducted a multisite, 3-state (Maryland, Virginia, and Washington, DC) prospective cohort study under the auspices of the Capital Area Practice Based Research Network (CAPRICORN). Between May 24 and August 13, 2004, all patients with new skin lesions who were seen by participating physicians were expected to enter into the study. Institutional Review Board approval was obtained from Georgetown University prior to the study. Written informed consent was obtained from all physicians and patients.

 

 

Inclusion/exclusion criteria

A lesion was considered new if patients presented to a family physician with one or more skin lesion that had not been previously treated or examined by another physician.

Patients were ineligible if they: 1) had a lesion with unknown duration; 2) had no telephone for follow-up; 3) did not speak English or Spanish; or, 4) had a lesion resulting from trauma.

Interventions

The initial intervention consisted of 2 parts: 1) after examining a patient, family physicians completed a 10-question survey, recording diagnosis, treatment plan, and resources used in treatment; 2) research assistants completed a 14-question survey, consisting of general patient and lesion information. Follow-up patient surveys were completed by telephone on days 7, 28, and 84.

Two university-based dermatologists helped develop the photography protocol. They specifically requested 3 digital photos of lesions under incandescent light, specific information for diagnosis, and direction for how photographs should be taken. The photographs were taken using Olympus C-5000 5MP Digital Camera w/3x Optical Zoom and were developed with HP photo glossy paper. The dermatologists separately reviewed the photographs blinded to the family physician’s diagnosis and treatment. The dermatologists commented on diagnosis and treatment plan for the first 99 patients enrolled in the study.

 

Outcomes

The primary outcome was dichotomous: whether skin lesions improved or not at day 7. Secondary outcomes were measures of improvement at days 28 and 84. We also examined patients’ satisfaction on a scale of 1 to 5 (“How satisfied were you with your skin care provided by your family physician?” 1=very satisfied, 5=very unsatisfied).

The categorization of acute skin lesions was developed by a modified delphi process in order to classify the lesions into groups. The principal investigator initially categorized all diagnoses and treatments. Next, 3 other members of the study (AK, BP, and DM) individually reviewed and guided categorizations. The 2 dermatologists gave the final input. This resulted in 41 categories for diagnosis and 9 for treatment.

Statistical analysis

Descriptive statistics provided baseline characteristics for the group. Frequencies were computed on patient, visit, and lesion characteristics, including patient improvement at days 7, 28, and 84. We also computed patient satisfaction with the care provided by their physician at 7, 28, and 84 days. Agreement rates between the family physicians and the 2 dermatologists were obtained for the subset of cases where both dermatologists agreed on the diagnosis. Similarly, the agreement rates were computed for recommended treatment using only those cases where the 2 dermatologists agreed on treatment. All descriptive statistics were computed with SPSS (SPSS, Inc, Chicago, Ill).

 

RESULTS

A total of 244 patients with 267 skin lesions were recruited by 53 family physicians during the study period. The 7-day follow-up patient survey was completed for 234 lesions (88%), the 28-day survey was completed for 220 lesions (82%), and the 84-day survey was completed for 203 lesions (76%). Study participants ranged in age from 3 months to 86 years; adults were predominantly college-educated, non-Hispanic, and white (TABLE 1). The majority of study participants (73%) reported that their skin lesion was the primary reason for their appointment.

Characteristics of the clinical encounters are presented in TABLE 2. While most skin lesions were present for 30 days or less (62%), over one quarter had been present for more than 90 days. The family physicians made 40 general dermatologic diagnoses. Only 3 lesions (1%) were considered malignant (data not shown). Family physicians reported relatively high confidence with their diagnoses (mean confidence score of 8.4, with range 1 to 10, 1=not at all certain, 10=very certain).

Other characteristics of the clinical encounters not shown in TABLE 2 are the family physicians’ judgment on resolution of the lesions and diagnostic steps used in treating the lesions. In most cases, family physicians believed the lesion would resolve within 12 weeks (203 lesions received a score of ≥7, 0=no improvement expected, 10=complete resolution expected). There was a bimodal distribution with 144 lesions receiving a 10, while 36 received a grade of 0. To make their diagnosis, most family physicians examined other parts of the skin (70%), consulted a colleague (14%), or consulted an electronic resource (6%). Laboratory tests, skin scrapings, diagnostic cultures, Woods lamp exams, or skin biopsies were performed in a total of 10% of encounters.

TABLE 3 reports the primary outcome, patient-reported resolution of skin lesions. These data were restricted only to lesions that were expected to improve (defined as a clinician assigned resolution score ≥7).

 

 

 

Overall, patients were very satisfied with the dermatologic care provided by their family physician. On a 5-point satisfaction scale, 55% of patients reported 1, the highest satisfaction level and 34% reported 2, the next highest level at day 7. At days 28 and 84, 93% of the patients reported the 2 highest levels of satisfaction. These data exclude patients lost to follow-up. Including all participants in the denominator, the rates of either the 2 highest levels of satisfaction at day 7 was 78%, at day 28 was 76%, and at day 84 was 70%.

The overall agreements in diagnosis and treatment, respectively, between the family physicians and the dermatologists were 72% and 80%. We examined only the aspects where both of the dermatologists agreed. Interestingly, for the more common diagnoses, the agreement rates were above 80%; however, for less common diagnoses, the rates were 62%. This trend was not observed in the treatment agreements, primarily due to dermatologists recommending steroids much more often than family physicians prescribed steroids. See Table 4 and Table 5.

TABLE 1
Characteristics of study sample

 

CHARACTERISTICN (%)*
Age of participants (years) 
 0–1742 (17)
 18–3580 (33)
 36–64107 (44)
 ≥6515 (6)
Gender 
 Male112 (46)
 Female131 (54)
Race/ethnicity 
 Hispanic27 (11)
 Non-Hispanic 
  White186 (77)
  African american13 (5)
  Asian13 (5)
  American Indian/Inuit2 (1)
Highest education level (older than 18 years) 
 High school or less26 (13)
 Some college/college grad111 (56)
 Graduate school63 (31)
Employment status (older than 18 years) 
 Employed163 (82)
 Unemployed35 (18)
Insurance status 
 Insured228 (94)
 Uninsured15 (6)
Skin lesion primary reason for visit 
 Yes189 (73)
 No70 (27)
* Totals may no always equal 244 due to missing data.
† Hispanics may be of any race.

TABLE 2
Skin lesions seen in study sites

 

DURATION OF LESION PRIOR TO VISIT (N=258)N (%)
 30 days or less161 (62%)
 31–60 days15 (6%)
 61–90 days9 (4%)
 91 days or longer73 (28%)
TEN MOST COMMONLY DIAGNOSED SKIN LESIONS (N=257)N (%)
 Eczema73 (28%)
 Dermatophyte infection28 (11%)
 Benign nevus26 (10%)
 Bacterial infection14 (6%)
 Seborreic keratosis11 (4%)
 Bites11 (4%)
 Herpes10 (4%)
 Warts10 (4%)
 Viral exanthem8 (3%)
 Actinic keratosis7 (3%)
FREQUENCY OF REPORTED TREATMENT ELEMENTSN (%)
 Prescription158 (59%)
 Recommended over-the-counter medication63 (24%)
 Reassurance with no other treatment43 (16%)
 Recommended prevention29 (11%)
 Removed lesion28 (11%)
 No treatment but arranged follow-up15 (6%)
Degree of certainty with diagnosis*Mean: 8.4 (SD: 1.7)
Referred to another provider (n=263)23 (9%)
Unless otherwise noted, the sample size is 267 lesions.
* 1=Not at all certain, 10=Very certain.

TABLE 3
Patients reported high satisfaction

 

 NUMBER OF PATIENTS REPORTING OUTCOME (%) FOR PATIENTS WITH LESIONS EXPECTED TO IMPROVE BY FAMILY PHYSICIAN (RESOLUTION SCORE ≥ 7)*
Day 7 (n=234)(n=181)
Much better or better152 (84%)
The same24 (13%)
Much worse or worse5 (3%)
Day 28 (n=220)(n=169)
Much better or better150 (89%)
The same15 (9%)
Much worse or worse1 (2%)
Day 84 (n=203)(n=157)
Much better or better147 (94%)
The same6 (4%)
Much worse or worse1 (2%)
* Totals not identical with Table 2 due to loss to follow-up.

Acknowledgments

The views expressed are those of the authors. No official endorsement by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality is intended or should be inferred. We would like to thank the following medical students who played an integral role in recruitment, Aaron Baker, Richard Sisson and Giovina Lara Bomba. We would like to thank Haewon Park for editorial assistance. We would like to that the following practices for participation, Potomac Physician Associates of Kensington, La Clinica del Pueblo, Community of Hope, Fort Lincoln, Fairfax Family Practice of Vienna, Fair Oaks, and Prince William.

CORRESPONDENCE
Dan Merenstein, MD, 215 Kober Cogan Hall, 3750 Reservoir Road, NW, Washington, DC 20007. E-mail: djm23@georgetown.edu

References

 

1. Dovey SM, Green LA, Phillips RL, Fryer GE. The ecology of medical care for children in the United States: a new application of an old model reveals inequities that can be corrected. Am Fam Physician 2003;68:2310.-

2. Green LA, Fryer GE, Jr, Yawn BP, Lanier D, Dovey SM. The ecology of medical care revisited. N Engl J Med 2001;344:2021-2025.

3. Townsend. Sabiston Textbook of Surgery. Elsevier, 2004:604–605.

4. Noble. Textbook of Primary Care Medicine. 3rd ed. St Louis, Mo: Mosby, 2001:808.

5. Cacy J, Mold JW. The clinical characteristics of brown recluse spider bites treated by family physicians: an OKPRN Study. Oklahoma Physicians research Network. J Fam Pract 1999;48:536-542.

6. Cassileth BR, Clark WH, Jr, Lusk EJ, Frederick BE, Thompson CJ, Walsh WP. How well do physicians recognize melanoma and other problem lesions? J Am Acad Dermatol 1986;14:555-560.

7. Ramsey DL, Fox AB. The ability of the primary care physicians to recognize the common dermatoses. Arch Dermatol 1981;117:620-622.

8. Federman DG, Kirsner RS. The primary care physician and the treatment of patients with skin disorders. Dermatol Clin 2000;18:215-221, viii.

9. Wagner RF, Jr, Wagner D, Tomich JM, Wagner KD, Grande DJ. Diagnoses of skin disease: dermatologists vs. nondermatologists. J Dermatol Surg Oncol 1985;11:476-479.

10. Federman DG, Concato J, Kirsner RS. Comparison of dermatologic diagnoses by primary care practitioners and dermatologists. A review of the literature. Arch Fam Med 1999;8:170-172.

11. Solomon BA, Collins R, Silverberg NB, Glass AT. Quality of care: issue or oversight in health care reform? J Am Acad Dermatol 1996;34:601-607.

12. Norman GR, Rosenthal D, Brooks LR, Allen SW, Muzzin LJ. The development of expertise in dermatology. Arch Dermatol 1989;125:1063-1068.

13. Kirsner RS, Federman DG. Lack of correlation between internists’ ability in dermatology and their patterns of treating patients with skin disease. Arch Dermatol 1996;132:1043-1046.

14. Clark RA, Rietschel RL. The cost of initiating appropriate therapy for skin diseases: a comparison of dermatologists and family physicians. J Am Acad Dermatol 1983;9:787-796.

15. Gerbert B, Maurer T, Berger T, et al. Primary care physicians as gatekeepers in managed care. Primary care physicians’ and dermatologists’ skills at secondary prevention of skin cancer. Arch Dermatol 1996;132:1030-1038.

16. Dolan NC, Martin GJ, Robinson JK, Rademaker AW. Skin cancer control practices among physicians in a university general medicine practice. J Gen Intern Med 1995;10:515-519.

17. Lowell BA, Froelich CW, Federman DG, Kirsner RS. Dermatology in primary care: Prevalence and patient disposition. J Am Acad Dermatol 2001;45:250-255.

18. Feldman SR, Fleischer AB, Jr, Chen JG. The gatekeeper model is inefficient for the delivery of dermatologic services. J Am Acad Dermatol 1999;40:426-432.

19. Fleischer AB, Jr, Herbert CR, Feldman SR, O’Brien F. Diagnosis of skin disease by nondermatologists. Am J Manag Care 2000;6:1149-1156.

20. McCarthy GM, Lamb GC, Russell TJ, Young MJ. Primary care-based dermatology practice: internists need more training. J Gen Intern Med 1991;6:52-56.

21. Halpern AC, Hanson LJ. Awareness of, knowledge of and attitudes to nonmelanoma skin cancer (NMSC) and actinic keratosis (AK) among physicians. Int J Dermatol 2004;43:638-642.

22. Roetzheim RG, Pal N, van Durme DJ, et al. Increasing supplies of dermatologists and family physicians are associated with earlier stage of melanoma detection. J Am Acad Dermatol 2000;43:211-218.

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Author and Disclosure Information

 

Dan Merenstein, MD
David Meyers, MD
Alex Krist, MD
Jose Delgado, MD
Jessica McCann, MA
Stephen Petterson, PhD
Robert L. Phillips, Jr, MD, MSPH
Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars Program, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, Md (Merenstein), Department of Family Medicine, Georgetown University, Washington, DC (Merenstein, Meyers, Delgado, McCann, Phillips), US Department of Health and Human Services, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Bethesda, Md (Meyers), Department of Family Medicine, Fairfax Family Practice Residency, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond (Krist), The Robert Graham Center for Policy Studies in Family Medicine and Primary Care, Washington, DC (McCann, Petterson, Phillips)

The authors have no conflicts of interest to report.

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Publications
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Sections
Author and Disclosure Information

 

Dan Merenstein, MD
David Meyers, MD
Alex Krist, MD
Jose Delgado, MD
Jessica McCann, MA
Stephen Petterson, PhD
Robert L. Phillips, Jr, MD, MSPH
Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars Program, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, Md (Merenstein), Department of Family Medicine, Georgetown University, Washington, DC (Merenstein, Meyers, Delgado, McCann, Phillips), US Department of Health and Human Services, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Bethesda, Md (Meyers), Department of Family Medicine, Fairfax Family Practice Residency, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond (Krist), The Robert Graham Center for Policy Studies in Family Medicine and Primary Care, Washington, DC (McCann, Petterson, Phillips)

The authors have no conflicts of interest to report.

Author and Disclosure Information

 

Dan Merenstein, MD
David Meyers, MD
Alex Krist, MD
Jose Delgado, MD
Jessica McCann, MA
Stephen Petterson, PhD
Robert L. Phillips, Jr, MD, MSPH
Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars Program, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, Md (Merenstein), Department of Family Medicine, Georgetown University, Washington, DC (Merenstein, Meyers, Delgado, McCann, Phillips), US Department of Health and Human Services, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Bethesda, Md (Meyers), Department of Family Medicine, Fairfax Family Practice Residency, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond (Krist), The Robert Graham Center for Policy Studies in Family Medicine and Primary Care, Washington, DC (McCann, Petterson, Phillips)

The authors have no conflicts of interest to report.

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Article PDF

 

Practice recommendation

Family physicians can feel comfortable that most patients whom they treat with skin disorders improve (B).

The bite of a brown recluse spider is dangerous, leading to necrosis and possibly death, right? That supposition is widely held and backed by studies.1,2 In fact, conventional wisdom says if a person is bitten by a brown recluse spider, serious complications are the norm and the best course of action is aggressive treatment in a hospital.

The studies supporting this view, however, were conducted in tertiary care settings, which do not always represent primary care settings.3,4 When Cacy and Mold5 examined the characteristics of brown recluse spider bites in outpatient settings, they found that 43% of patients healed within 2 weeks and only 1 in 149 patients required hospitalization.

Is it likely other skin disorders seen in primary care also have clinical courses more favorable than when seen in tertiary care centers? This was one of our hypotheses, and we structured our study to determine the percentage of the skin lesions that improved after evaluation and management by family physicians.

How do FPs compare with dermatologists?

Dermatology literature boasts about the superiority of the dermatologist in diagnostic ability, cost savings, and cancer prevention when compared with primary care physicians.6-10 Studies have evaluated the skill level of primary care physicians compared with dermatologists in identifying skin disorders when tested with color transparencies, computer images, and slides—however, rarely with actual patients.7,9-16 Some studies have suggested a higher rate of referral for skin problems than for other non-dermatologic conditions.14,17,18

Often the outcome of interest in these studies is disease-oriented, judging a physician’s diagnostic ability, rather than examining a patient-oriented outcome, such as resolution of lesion or patient satisfaction.

Thus, the secondary aims of our study were to observe how family physicians diagnose and treat the lesions, and to gauge their concordance with dermatologists’ assessments and plans. We hypothesized that, in an office setting, family physicians would provide effective and efficient treatment for most patients who present with new skin lesions, and that there is high diagnostic concordance between the 2 specialties.

We first share our study findings, and then provide details of our Methodology and Results.

Family physicians excel at dermatologic care

Our study demonstrates that most skin conditions diagnosed and managed by family physicians improve. At day 7, 84% of patients who were contacted reported their skin lesions were “better” or “much better.” Moreover, patients said they were highly satisfied with their care. Referrals to subspecialists were infrequent.

These findings counter those from previous studies questioning primary care physicians’ care of dermatologic conditions. We believe it is likely that patients in previous studies reflected different populations than are typically seen by family physicians.18-20 Another difference may be that family physicians used other resources to assist with their diagnosis and treatment decisions. As we hypothesized, family physicians had good correlation with dermatologists in both diagnosis and treatment, and skin lesions improved.

Important study limitations

We relied on patient reports of improvement. While-self impression of degree of improvement is a patient-centered outcome, there may be instances in which inappropriate or insufficient treatment may produce temporary symptomatic relief and mask true improvement.

Although the patients’ primary care physicians were not involved in the follow-up process, it is possible they felt some social pressure to report higher levels of improvement or satisfaction.

Though we attempted to enroll all eligible patients, some patients seen for skin conditions may not have been captured. As we met our planned enrollment rates, we believe we captured most of the eligible encounters.

Some studies have questioned primary care physicians’ abilities to properly diagnose skin cancers.21,22 Our study was not designed or powered to detect skin cancers or the number, if any, of missed diagnoses of skin cancer.

Cues for teachers of family medicine

Most diagnoses fell within a limited set of diagnostic categories that probably reflect a distribution of skin disorders more typical within family medicine than in dermatology clinics. This range of disease defines a set of diagnostic skills, information resources, and treatment plans required to make these diagnoses and manage these conditions in family practice settings. This information should help physicians involved in training family physicians to concentrate on these common categories of diagnoses. Most important, our study conducted with actual patients found that family physicians manage skin lesions effectively and efficiently, with high patient satisfaction.

 

Methods

Study design and participants

We conducted a multisite, 3-state (Maryland, Virginia, and Washington, DC) prospective cohort study under the auspices of the Capital Area Practice Based Research Network (CAPRICORN). Between May 24 and August 13, 2004, all patients with new skin lesions who were seen by participating physicians were expected to enter into the study. Institutional Review Board approval was obtained from Georgetown University prior to the study. Written informed consent was obtained from all physicians and patients.

 

 

Inclusion/exclusion criteria

A lesion was considered new if patients presented to a family physician with one or more skin lesion that had not been previously treated or examined by another physician.

Patients were ineligible if they: 1) had a lesion with unknown duration; 2) had no telephone for follow-up; 3) did not speak English or Spanish; or, 4) had a lesion resulting from trauma.

Interventions

The initial intervention consisted of 2 parts: 1) after examining a patient, family physicians completed a 10-question survey, recording diagnosis, treatment plan, and resources used in treatment; 2) research assistants completed a 14-question survey, consisting of general patient and lesion information. Follow-up patient surveys were completed by telephone on days 7, 28, and 84.

Two university-based dermatologists helped develop the photography protocol. They specifically requested 3 digital photos of lesions under incandescent light, specific information for diagnosis, and direction for how photographs should be taken. The photographs were taken using Olympus C-5000 5MP Digital Camera w/3x Optical Zoom and were developed with HP photo glossy paper. The dermatologists separately reviewed the photographs blinded to the family physician’s diagnosis and treatment. The dermatologists commented on diagnosis and treatment plan for the first 99 patients enrolled in the study.

 

Outcomes

The primary outcome was dichotomous: whether skin lesions improved or not at day 7. Secondary outcomes were measures of improvement at days 28 and 84. We also examined patients’ satisfaction on a scale of 1 to 5 (“How satisfied were you with your skin care provided by your family physician?” 1=very satisfied, 5=very unsatisfied).

The categorization of acute skin lesions was developed by a modified delphi process in order to classify the lesions into groups. The principal investigator initially categorized all diagnoses and treatments. Next, 3 other members of the study (AK, BP, and DM) individually reviewed and guided categorizations. The 2 dermatologists gave the final input. This resulted in 41 categories for diagnosis and 9 for treatment.

Statistical analysis

Descriptive statistics provided baseline characteristics for the group. Frequencies were computed on patient, visit, and lesion characteristics, including patient improvement at days 7, 28, and 84. We also computed patient satisfaction with the care provided by their physician at 7, 28, and 84 days. Agreement rates between the family physicians and the 2 dermatologists were obtained for the subset of cases where both dermatologists agreed on the diagnosis. Similarly, the agreement rates were computed for recommended treatment using only those cases where the 2 dermatologists agreed on treatment. All descriptive statistics were computed with SPSS (SPSS, Inc, Chicago, Ill).

 

RESULTS

A total of 244 patients with 267 skin lesions were recruited by 53 family physicians during the study period. The 7-day follow-up patient survey was completed for 234 lesions (88%), the 28-day survey was completed for 220 lesions (82%), and the 84-day survey was completed for 203 lesions (76%). Study participants ranged in age from 3 months to 86 years; adults were predominantly college-educated, non-Hispanic, and white (TABLE 1). The majority of study participants (73%) reported that their skin lesion was the primary reason for their appointment.

Characteristics of the clinical encounters are presented in TABLE 2. While most skin lesions were present for 30 days or less (62%), over one quarter had been present for more than 90 days. The family physicians made 40 general dermatologic diagnoses. Only 3 lesions (1%) were considered malignant (data not shown). Family physicians reported relatively high confidence with their diagnoses (mean confidence score of 8.4, with range 1 to 10, 1=not at all certain, 10=very certain).

Other characteristics of the clinical encounters not shown in TABLE 2 are the family physicians’ judgment on resolution of the lesions and diagnostic steps used in treating the lesions. In most cases, family physicians believed the lesion would resolve within 12 weeks (203 lesions received a score of ≥7, 0=no improvement expected, 10=complete resolution expected). There was a bimodal distribution with 144 lesions receiving a 10, while 36 received a grade of 0. To make their diagnosis, most family physicians examined other parts of the skin (70%), consulted a colleague (14%), or consulted an electronic resource (6%). Laboratory tests, skin scrapings, diagnostic cultures, Woods lamp exams, or skin biopsies were performed in a total of 10% of encounters.

TABLE 3 reports the primary outcome, patient-reported resolution of skin lesions. These data were restricted only to lesions that were expected to improve (defined as a clinician assigned resolution score ≥7).

 

 

 

Overall, patients were very satisfied with the dermatologic care provided by their family physician. On a 5-point satisfaction scale, 55% of patients reported 1, the highest satisfaction level and 34% reported 2, the next highest level at day 7. At days 28 and 84, 93% of the patients reported the 2 highest levels of satisfaction. These data exclude patients lost to follow-up. Including all participants in the denominator, the rates of either the 2 highest levels of satisfaction at day 7 was 78%, at day 28 was 76%, and at day 84 was 70%.

The overall agreements in diagnosis and treatment, respectively, between the family physicians and the dermatologists were 72% and 80%. We examined only the aspects where both of the dermatologists agreed. Interestingly, for the more common diagnoses, the agreement rates were above 80%; however, for less common diagnoses, the rates were 62%. This trend was not observed in the treatment agreements, primarily due to dermatologists recommending steroids much more often than family physicians prescribed steroids. See Table 4 and Table 5.

TABLE 1
Characteristics of study sample

 

CHARACTERISTICN (%)*
Age of participants (years) 
 0–1742 (17)
 18–3580 (33)
 36–64107 (44)
 ≥6515 (6)
Gender 
 Male112 (46)
 Female131 (54)
Race/ethnicity 
 Hispanic27 (11)
 Non-Hispanic 
  White186 (77)
  African american13 (5)
  Asian13 (5)
  American Indian/Inuit2 (1)
Highest education level (older than 18 years) 
 High school or less26 (13)
 Some college/college grad111 (56)
 Graduate school63 (31)
Employment status (older than 18 years) 
 Employed163 (82)
 Unemployed35 (18)
Insurance status 
 Insured228 (94)
 Uninsured15 (6)
Skin lesion primary reason for visit 
 Yes189 (73)
 No70 (27)
* Totals may no always equal 244 due to missing data.
† Hispanics may be of any race.

TABLE 2
Skin lesions seen in study sites

 

DURATION OF LESION PRIOR TO VISIT (N=258)N (%)
 30 days or less161 (62%)
 31–60 days15 (6%)
 61–90 days9 (4%)
 91 days or longer73 (28%)
TEN MOST COMMONLY DIAGNOSED SKIN LESIONS (N=257)N (%)
 Eczema73 (28%)
 Dermatophyte infection28 (11%)
 Benign nevus26 (10%)
 Bacterial infection14 (6%)
 Seborreic keratosis11 (4%)
 Bites11 (4%)
 Herpes10 (4%)
 Warts10 (4%)
 Viral exanthem8 (3%)
 Actinic keratosis7 (3%)
FREQUENCY OF REPORTED TREATMENT ELEMENTSN (%)
 Prescription158 (59%)
 Recommended over-the-counter medication63 (24%)
 Reassurance with no other treatment43 (16%)
 Recommended prevention29 (11%)
 Removed lesion28 (11%)
 No treatment but arranged follow-up15 (6%)
Degree of certainty with diagnosis*Mean: 8.4 (SD: 1.7)
Referred to another provider (n=263)23 (9%)
Unless otherwise noted, the sample size is 267 lesions.
* 1=Not at all certain, 10=Very certain.

TABLE 3
Patients reported high satisfaction

 

 NUMBER OF PATIENTS REPORTING OUTCOME (%) FOR PATIENTS WITH LESIONS EXPECTED TO IMPROVE BY FAMILY PHYSICIAN (RESOLUTION SCORE ≥ 7)*
Day 7 (n=234)(n=181)
Much better or better152 (84%)
The same24 (13%)
Much worse or worse5 (3%)
Day 28 (n=220)(n=169)
Much better or better150 (89%)
The same15 (9%)
Much worse or worse1 (2%)
Day 84 (n=203)(n=157)
Much better or better147 (94%)
The same6 (4%)
Much worse or worse1 (2%)
* Totals not identical with Table 2 due to loss to follow-up.

Acknowledgments

The views expressed are those of the authors. No official endorsement by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality is intended or should be inferred. We would like to thank the following medical students who played an integral role in recruitment, Aaron Baker, Richard Sisson and Giovina Lara Bomba. We would like to thank Haewon Park for editorial assistance. We would like to that the following practices for participation, Potomac Physician Associates of Kensington, La Clinica del Pueblo, Community of Hope, Fort Lincoln, Fairfax Family Practice of Vienna, Fair Oaks, and Prince William.

CORRESPONDENCE
Dan Merenstein, MD, 215 Kober Cogan Hall, 3750 Reservoir Road, NW, Washington, DC 20007. E-mail: djm23@georgetown.edu

 

Practice recommendation

Family physicians can feel comfortable that most patients whom they treat with skin disorders improve (B).

The bite of a brown recluse spider is dangerous, leading to necrosis and possibly death, right? That supposition is widely held and backed by studies.1,2 In fact, conventional wisdom says if a person is bitten by a brown recluse spider, serious complications are the norm and the best course of action is aggressive treatment in a hospital.

The studies supporting this view, however, were conducted in tertiary care settings, which do not always represent primary care settings.3,4 When Cacy and Mold5 examined the characteristics of brown recluse spider bites in outpatient settings, they found that 43% of patients healed within 2 weeks and only 1 in 149 patients required hospitalization.

Is it likely other skin disorders seen in primary care also have clinical courses more favorable than when seen in tertiary care centers? This was one of our hypotheses, and we structured our study to determine the percentage of the skin lesions that improved after evaluation and management by family physicians.

How do FPs compare with dermatologists?

Dermatology literature boasts about the superiority of the dermatologist in diagnostic ability, cost savings, and cancer prevention when compared with primary care physicians.6-10 Studies have evaluated the skill level of primary care physicians compared with dermatologists in identifying skin disorders when tested with color transparencies, computer images, and slides—however, rarely with actual patients.7,9-16 Some studies have suggested a higher rate of referral for skin problems than for other non-dermatologic conditions.14,17,18

Often the outcome of interest in these studies is disease-oriented, judging a physician’s diagnostic ability, rather than examining a patient-oriented outcome, such as resolution of lesion or patient satisfaction.

Thus, the secondary aims of our study were to observe how family physicians diagnose and treat the lesions, and to gauge their concordance with dermatologists’ assessments and plans. We hypothesized that, in an office setting, family physicians would provide effective and efficient treatment for most patients who present with new skin lesions, and that there is high diagnostic concordance between the 2 specialties.

We first share our study findings, and then provide details of our Methodology and Results.

Family physicians excel at dermatologic care

Our study demonstrates that most skin conditions diagnosed and managed by family physicians improve. At day 7, 84% of patients who were contacted reported their skin lesions were “better” or “much better.” Moreover, patients said they were highly satisfied with their care. Referrals to subspecialists were infrequent.

These findings counter those from previous studies questioning primary care physicians’ care of dermatologic conditions. We believe it is likely that patients in previous studies reflected different populations than are typically seen by family physicians.18-20 Another difference may be that family physicians used other resources to assist with their diagnosis and treatment decisions. As we hypothesized, family physicians had good correlation with dermatologists in both diagnosis and treatment, and skin lesions improved.

Important study limitations

We relied on patient reports of improvement. While-self impression of degree of improvement is a patient-centered outcome, there may be instances in which inappropriate or insufficient treatment may produce temporary symptomatic relief and mask true improvement.

Although the patients’ primary care physicians were not involved in the follow-up process, it is possible they felt some social pressure to report higher levels of improvement or satisfaction.

Though we attempted to enroll all eligible patients, some patients seen for skin conditions may not have been captured. As we met our planned enrollment rates, we believe we captured most of the eligible encounters.

Some studies have questioned primary care physicians’ abilities to properly diagnose skin cancers.21,22 Our study was not designed or powered to detect skin cancers or the number, if any, of missed diagnoses of skin cancer.

Cues for teachers of family medicine

Most diagnoses fell within a limited set of diagnostic categories that probably reflect a distribution of skin disorders more typical within family medicine than in dermatology clinics. This range of disease defines a set of diagnostic skills, information resources, and treatment plans required to make these diagnoses and manage these conditions in family practice settings. This information should help physicians involved in training family physicians to concentrate on these common categories of diagnoses. Most important, our study conducted with actual patients found that family physicians manage skin lesions effectively and efficiently, with high patient satisfaction.

 

Methods

Study design and participants

We conducted a multisite, 3-state (Maryland, Virginia, and Washington, DC) prospective cohort study under the auspices of the Capital Area Practice Based Research Network (CAPRICORN). Between May 24 and August 13, 2004, all patients with new skin lesions who were seen by participating physicians were expected to enter into the study. Institutional Review Board approval was obtained from Georgetown University prior to the study. Written informed consent was obtained from all physicians and patients.

 

 

Inclusion/exclusion criteria

A lesion was considered new if patients presented to a family physician with one or more skin lesion that had not been previously treated or examined by another physician.

Patients were ineligible if they: 1) had a lesion with unknown duration; 2) had no telephone for follow-up; 3) did not speak English or Spanish; or, 4) had a lesion resulting from trauma.

Interventions

The initial intervention consisted of 2 parts: 1) after examining a patient, family physicians completed a 10-question survey, recording diagnosis, treatment plan, and resources used in treatment; 2) research assistants completed a 14-question survey, consisting of general patient and lesion information. Follow-up patient surveys were completed by telephone on days 7, 28, and 84.

Two university-based dermatologists helped develop the photography protocol. They specifically requested 3 digital photos of lesions under incandescent light, specific information for diagnosis, and direction for how photographs should be taken. The photographs were taken using Olympus C-5000 5MP Digital Camera w/3x Optical Zoom and were developed with HP photo glossy paper. The dermatologists separately reviewed the photographs blinded to the family physician’s diagnosis and treatment. The dermatologists commented on diagnosis and treatment plan for the first 99 patients enrolled in the study.

 

Outcomes

The primary outcome was dichotomous: whether skin lesions improved or not at day 7. Secondary outcomes were measures of improvement at days 28 and 84. We also examined patients’ satisfaction on a scale of 1 to 5 (“How satisfied were you with your skin care provided by your family physician?” 1=very satisfied, 5=very unsatisfied).

The categorization of acute skin lesions was developed by a modified delphi process in order to classify the lesions into groups. The principal investigator initially categorized all diagnoses and treatments. Next, 3 other members of the study (AK, BP, and DM) individually reviewed and guided categorizations. The 2 dermatologists gave the final input. This resulted in 41 categories for diagnosis and 9 for treatment.

Statistical analysis

Descriptive statistics provided baseline characteristics for the group. Frequencies were computed on patient, visit, and lesion characteristics, including patient improvement at days 7, 28, and 84. We also computed patient satisfaction with the care provided by their physician at 7, 28, and 84 days. Agreement rates between the family physicians and the 2 dermatologists were obtained for the subset of cases where both dermatologists agreed on the diagnosis. Similarly, the agreement rates were computed for recommended treatment using only those cases where the 2 dermatologists agreed on treatment. All descriptive statistics were computed with SPSS (SPSS, Inc, Chicago, Ill).

 

RESULTS

A total of 244 patients with 267 skin lesions were recruited by 53 family physicians during the study period. The 7-day follow-up patient survey was completed for 234 lesions (88%), the 28-day survey was completed for 220 lesions (82%), and the 84-day survey was completed for 203 lesions (76%). Study participants ranged in age from 3 months to 86 years; adults were predominantly college-educated, non-Hispanic, and white (TABLE 1). The majority of study participants (73%) reported that their skin lesion was the primary reason for their appointment.

Characteristics of the clinical encounters are presented in TABLE 2. While most skin lesions were present for 30 days or less (62%), over one quarter had been present for more than 90 days. The family physicians made 40 general dermatologic diagnoses. Only 3 lesions (1%) were considered malignant (data not shown). Family physicians reported relatively high confidence with their diagnoses (mean confidence score of 8.4, with range 1 to 10, 1=not at all certain, 10=very certain).

Other characteristics of the clinical encounters not shown in TABLE 2 are the family physicians’ judgment on resolution of the lesions and diagnostic steps used in treating the lesions. In most cases, family physicians believed the lesion would resolve within 12 weeks (203 lesions received a score of ≥7, 0=no improvement expected, 10=complete resolution expected). There was a bimodal distribution with 144 lesions receiving a 10, while 36 received a grade of 0. To make their diagnosis, most family physicians examined other parts of the skin (70%), consulted a colleague (14%), or consulted an electronic resource (6%). Laboratory tests, skin scrapings, diagnostic cultures, Woods lamp exams, or skin biopsies were performed in a total of 10% of encounters.

TABLE 3 reports the primary outcome, patient-reported resolution of skin lesions. These data were restricted only to lesions that were expected to improve (defined as a clinician assigned resolution score ≥7).

 

 

 

Overall, patients were very satisfied with the dermatologic care provided by their family physician. On a 5-point satisfaction scale, 55% of patients reported 1, the highest satisfaction level and 34% reported 2, the next highest level at day 7. At days 28 and 84, 93% of the patients reported the 2 highest levels of satisfaction. These data exclude patients lost to follow-up. Including all participants in the denominator, the rates of either the 2 highest levels of satisfaction at day 7 was 78%, at day 28 was 76%, and at day 84 was 70%.

The overall agreements in diagnosis and treatment, respectively, between the family physicians and the dermatologists were 72% and 80%. We examined only the aspects where both of the dermatologists agreed. Interestingly, for the more common diagnoses, the agreement rates were above 80%; however, for less common diagnoses, the rates were 62%. This trend was not observed in the treatment agreements, primarily due to dermatologists recommending steroids much more often than family physicians prescribed steroids. See Table 4 and Table 5.

TABLE 1
Characteristics of study sample

 

CHARACTERISTICN (%)*
Age of participants (years) 
 0–1742 (17)
 18–3580 (33)
 36–64107 (44)
 ≥6515 (6)
Gender 
 Male112 (46)
 Female131 (54)
Race/ethnicity 
 Hispanic27 (11)
 Non-Hispanic 
  White186 (77)
  African american13 (5)
  Asian13 (5)
  American Indian/Inuit2 (1)
Highest education level (older than 18 years) 
 High school or less26 (13)
 Some college/college grad111 (56)
 Graduate school63 (31)
Employment status (older than 18 years) 
 Employed163 (82)
 Unemployed35 (18)
Insurance status 
 Insured228 (94)
 Uninsured15 (6)
Skin lesion primary reason for visit 
 Yes189 (73)
 No70 (27)
* Totals may no always equal 244 due to missing data.
† Hispanics may be of any race.

TABLE 2
Skin lesions seen in study sites

 

DURATION OF LESION PRIOR TO VISIT (N=258)N (%)
 30 days or less161 (62%)
 31–60 days15 (6%)
 61–90 days9 (4%)
 91 days or longer73 (28%)
TEN MOST COMMONLY DIAGNOSED SKIN LESIONS (N=257)N (%)
 Eczema73 (28%)
 Dermatophyte infection28 (11%)
 Benign nevus26 (10%)
 Bacterial infection14 (6%)
 Seborreic keratosis11 (4%)
 Bites11 (4%)
 Herpes10 (4%)
 Warts10 (4%)
 Viral exanthem8 (3%)
 Actinic keratosis7 (3%)
FREQUENCY OF REPORTED TREATMENT ELEMENTSN (%)
 Prescription158 (59%)
 Recommended over-the-counter medication63 (24%)
 Reassurance with no other treatment43 (16%)
 Recommended prevention29 (11%)
 Removed lesion28 (11%)
 No treatment but arranged follow-up15 (6%)
Degree of certainty with diagnosis*Mean: 8.4 (SD: 1.7)
Referred to another provider (n=263)23 (9%)
Unless otherwise noted, the sample size is 267 lesions.
* 1=Not at all certain, 10=Very certain.

TABLE 3
Patients reported high satisfaction

 

 NUMBER OF PATIENTS REPORTING OUTCOME (%) FOR PATIENTS WITH LESIONS EXPECTED TO IMPROVE BY FAMILY PHYSICIAN (RESOLUTION SCORE ≥ 7)*
Day 7 (n=234)(n=181)
Much better or better152 (84%)
The same24 (13%)
Much worse or worse5 (3%)
Day 28 (n=220)(n=169)
Much better or better150 (89%)
The same15 (9%)
Much worse or worse1 (2%)
Day 84 (n=203)(n=157)
Much better or better147 (94%)
The same6 (4%)
Much worse or worse1 (2%)
* Totals not identical with Table 2 due to loss to follow-up.

Acknowledgments

The views expressed are those of the authors. No official endorsement by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality is intended or should be inferred. We would like to thank the following medical students who played an integral role in recruitment, Aaron Baker, Richard Sisson and Giovina Lara Bomba. We would like to thank Haewon Park for editorial assistance. We would like to that the following practices for participation, Potomac Physician Associates of Kensington, La Clinica del Pueblo, Community of Hope, Fort Lincoln, Fairfax Family Practice of Vienna, Fair Oaks, and Prince William.

CORRESPONDENCE
Dan Merenstein, MD, 215 Kober Cogan Hall, 3750 Reservoir Road, NW, Washington, DC 20007. E-mail: djm23@georgetown.edu

References

 

1. Dovey SM, Green LA, Phillips RL, Fryer GE. The ecology of medical care for children in the United States: a new application of an old model reveals inequities that can be corrected. Am Fam Physician 2003;68:2310.-

2. Green LA, Fryer GE, Jr, Yawn BP, Lanier D, Dovey SM. The ecology of medical care revisited. N Engl J Med 2001;344:2021-2025.

3. Townsend. Sabiston Textbook of Surgery. Elsevier, 2004:604–605.

4. Noble. Textbook of Primary Care Medicine. 3rd ed. St Louis, Mo: Mosby, 2001:808.

5. Cacy J, Mold JW. The clinical characteristics of brown recluse spider bites treated by family physicians: an OKPRN Study. Oklahoma Physicians research Network. J Fam Pract 1999;48:536-542.

6. Cassileth BR, Clark WH, Jr, Lusk EJ, Frederick BE, Thompson CJ, Walsh WP. How well do physicians recognize melanoma and other problem lesions? J Am Acad Dermatol 1986;14:555-560.

7. Ramsey DL, Fox AB. The ability of the primary care physicians to recognize the common dermatoses. Arch Dermatol 1981;117:620-622.

8. Federman DG, Kirsner RS. The primary care physician and the treatment of patients with skin disorders. Dermatol Clin 2000;18:215-221, viii.

9. Wagner RF, Jr, Wagner D, Tomich JM, Wagner KD, Grande DJ. Diagnoses of skin disease: dermatologists vs. nondermatologists. J Dermatol Surg Oncol 1985;11:476-479.

10. Federman DG, Concato J, Kirsner RS. Comparison of dermatologic diagnoses by primary care practitioners and dermatologists. A review of the literature. Arch Fam Med 1999;8:170-172.

11. Solomon BA, Collins R, Silverberg NB, Glass AT. Quality of care: issue or oversight in health care reform? J Am Acad Dermatol 1996;34:601-607.

12. Norman GR, Rosenthal D, Brooks LR, Allen SW, Muzzin LJ. The development of expertise in dermatology. Arch Dermatol 1989;125:1063-1068.

13. Kirsner RS, Federman DG. Lack of correlation between internists’ ability in dermatology and their patterns of treating patients with skin disease. Arch Dermatol 1996;132:1043-1046.

14. Clark RA, Rietschel RL. The cost of initiating appropriate therapy for skin diseases: a comparison of dermatologists and family physicians. J Am Acad Dermatol 1983;9:787-796.

15. Gerbert B, Maurer T, Berger T, et al. Primary care physicians as gatekeepers in managed care. Primary care physicians’ and dermatologists’ skills at secondary prevention of skin cancer. Arch Dermatol 1996;132:1030-1038.

16. Dolan NC, Martin GJ, Robinson JK, Rademaker AW. Skin cancer control practices among physicians in a university general medicine practice. J Gen Intern Med 1995;10:515-519.

17. Lowell BA, Froelich CW, Federman DG, Kirsner RS. Dermatology in primary care: Prevalence and patient disposition. J Am Acad Dermatol 2001;45:250-255.

18. Feldman SR, Fleischer AB, Jr, Chen JG. The gatekeeper model is inefficient for the delivery of dermatologic services. J Am Acad Dermatol 1999;40:426-432.

19. Fleischer AB, Jr, Herbert CR, Feldman SR, O’Brien F. Diagnosis of skin disease by nondermatologists. Am J Manag Care 2000;6:1149-1156.

20. McCarthy GM, Lamb GC, Russell TJ, Young MJ. Primary care-based dermatology practice: internists need more training. J Gen Intern Med 1991;6:52-56.

21. Halpern AC, Hanson LJ. Awareness of, knowledge of and attitudes to nonmelanoma skin cancer (NMSC) and actinic keratosis (AK) among physicians. Int J Dermatol 2004;43:638-642.

22. Roetzheim RG, Pal N, van Durme DJ, et al. Increasing supplies of dermatologists and family physicians are associated with earlier stage of melanoma detection. J Am Acad Dermatol 2000;43:211-218.

References

 

1. Dovey SM, Green LA, Phillips RL, Fryer GE. The ecology of medical care for children in the United States: a new application of an old model reveals inequities that can be corrected. Am Fam Physician 2003;68:2310.-

2. Green LA, Fryer GE, Jr, Yawn BP, Lanier D, Dovey SM. The ecology of medical care revisited. N Engl J Med 2001;344:2021-2025.

3. Townsend. Sabiston Textbook of Surgery. Elsevier, 2004:604–605.

4. Noble. Textbook of Primary Care Medicine. 3rd ed. St Louis, Mo: Mosby, 2001:808.

5. Cacy J, Mold JW. The clinical characteristics of brown recluse spider bites treated by family physicians: an OKPRN Study. Oklahoma Physicians research Network. J Fam Pract 1999;48:536-542.

6. Cassileth BR, Clark WH, Jr, Lusk EJ, Frederick BE, Thompson CJ, Walsh WP. How well do physicians recognize melanoma and other problem lesions? J Am Acad Dermatol 1986;14:555-560.

7. Ramsey DL, Fox AB. The ability of the primary care physicians to recognize the common dermatoses. Arch Dermatol 1981;117:620-622.

8. Federman DG, Kirsner RS. The primary care physician and the treatment of patients with skin disorders. Dermatol Clin 2000;18:215-221, viii.

9. Wagner RF, Jr, Wagner D, Tomich JM, Wagner KD, Grande DJ. Diagnoses of skin disease: dermatologists vs. nondermatologists. J Dermatol Surg Oncol 1985;11:476-479.

10. Federman DG, Concato J, Kirsner RS. Comparison of dermatologic diagnoses by primary care practitioners and dermatologists. A review of the literature. Arch Fam Med 1999;8:170-172.

11. Solomon BA, Collins R, Silverberg NB, Glass AT. Quality of care: issue or oversight in health care reform? J Am Acad Dermatol 1996;34:601-607.

12. Norman GR, Rosenthal D, Brooks LR, Allen SW, Muzzin LJ. The development of expertise in dermatology. Arch Dermatol 1989;125:1063-1068.

13. Kirsner RS, Federman DG. Lack of correlation between internists’ ability in dermatology and their patterns of treating patients with skin disease. Arch Dermatol 1996;132:1043-1046.

14. Clark RA, Rietschel RL. The cost of initiating appropriate therapy for skin diseases: a comparison of dermatologists and family physicians. J Am Acad Dermatol 1983;9:787-796.

15. Gerbert B, Maurer T, Berger T, et al. Primary care physicians as gatekeepers in managed care. Primary care physicians’ and dermatologists’ skills at secondary prevention of skin cancer. Arch Dermatol 1996;132:1030-1038.

16. Dolan NC, Martin GJ, Robinson JK, Rademaker AW. Skin cancer control practices among physicians in a university general medicine practice. J Gen Intern Med 1995;10:515-519.

17. Lowell BA, Froelich CW, Federman DG, Kirsner RS. Dermatology in primary care: Prevalence and patient disposition. J Am Acad Dermatol 2001;45:250-255.

18. Feldman SR, Fleischer AB, Jr, Chen JG. The gatekeeper model is inefficient for the delivery of dermatologic services. J Am Acad Dermatol 1999;40:426-432.

19. Fleischer AB, Jr, Herbert CR, Feldman SR, O’Brien F. Diagnosis of skin disease by nondermatologists. Am J Manag Care 2000;6:1149-1156.

20. McCarthy GM, Lamb GC, Russell TJ, Young MJ. Primary care-based dermatology practice: internists need more training. J Gen Intern Med 1991;6:52-56.

21. Halpern AC, Hanson LJ. Awareness of, knowledge of and attitudes to nonmelanoma skin cancer (NMSC) and actinic keratosis (AK) among physicians. Int J Dermatol 2004;43:638-642.

22. Roetzheim RG, Pal N, van Durme DJ, et al. Increasing supplies of dermatologists and family physicians are associated with earlier stage of melanoma detection. J Am Acad Dermatol 2000;43:211-218.

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The Journal of Family Practice - 56(1)
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The Journal of Family Practice - 56(1)
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40-45
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