Investigation of Consultations Requested by Dermatology Inpatient

Ahmet Doğukan Dağdaş, Bilge Fettahlioglu Karaman, Varol Lütfü Aksungur Department of Dermatology, Çukurova University, Faculty of Medicine, Adana, TurkeyCorrespondence: Ahmet Doğukan Dağdaş, Cukurova University, Faculty of Medicine, D...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dağdaş AD, Fettahlioglu Karaman B, Aksungur VL
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2025-01-01
Series:Clinical, Cosmetic and Investigational Dermatology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.dovepress.com/investigation-of-consultations-requested-by-dermatology-inpatient-peer-reviewed-fulltext-article-CCID
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1841555965996957696
author Dağdaş AD
Fettahlioglu Karaman B
Aksungur VL
author_facet Dağdaş AD
Fettahlioglu Karaman B
Aksungur VL
author_sort Dağdaş AD
collection DOAJ
description Ahmet Doğukan Dağdaş, Bilge Fettahlioglu Karaman, Varol Lütfü Aksungur Department of Dermatology, Çukurova University, Faculty of Medicine, Adana, TurkeyCorrespondence: Ahmet Doğukan Dağdaş, Cukurova University, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Dermatology, Adana, 01330, Turkey, Tel +90 506 8326195, Fax +90 322 3387144, Email dogukan1993@hotmail.comBackground: Although dedicated dermatology wards have been closed in some countries, they continue to exist in others. Inpatient consultations requested from dermatologists have been investigated widely. However, those requested by dermatologists have been taken into consideration only in a few studies.Objective: This study aimed to investigate such consultations, particularly in the context of diagnoses, reasons, and consulting specialties.Methods: Patients admitted to the dermatology ward of a tertiary hospital in Turkey between January 2019 and August 2021 were retrospectively analyzed.Results: The most common diagnoses were non-pustular psoriasis (11.5%), pruritus (10.9%), and urticaria (10.6%) in 548 admissions with a median length of stay of 15.1 days. There were 1712 consultations. Their number per admission was positively correlated with patient’s age and length of stay. Highest numbers were observed in admissions with a diagnosis of bullous pemphigoid, leg ulcers, lupus erythematosus, pustular psoriasis, hidradenitis suppurativa, and pemphigus. Reasons for consultation were management of comorbidity (53.8%), evaluation for drug precaution (19.1%), investigation for etiology (12.8%), evaluation for systemic involvement (6.0%), taking treatment advice (5.4%), obtaining biopsy (3.0%), and differential diagnosis (1.9%).Conclusion: Our findings showed that the number of consultations per admission was high, and the most common reason for consultation was comorbidity, indicating that, practically, there are no more pure dermatological patients. Therefore, if dedicated dermatology wards will continue to exist, in order to lower the number of consultations so length of stay, dermatologist should be trained in a manner so that they have more knowledge about common comorbidities.Keywords: inpatient dermatology, consultation, ward, length of stay, comorbidity
format Article
id doaj-art-402566030d724800a3ced7e13d0f14f5
institution Kabale University
issn 1178-7015
language English
publishDate 2025-01-01
publisher Dove Medical Press
record_format Article
series Clinical, Cosmetic and Investigational Dermatology
spelling doaj-art-402566030d724800a3ced7e13d0f14f52025-01-07T16:42:40ZengDove Medical PressClinical, Cosmetic and Investigational Dermatology1178-70152025-01-01Volume 18374599015Investigation of Consultations Requested by Dermatology InpatientDağdaş ADFettahlioglu Karaman BAksungur VLAhmet Doğukan Dağdaş, Bilge Fettahlioglu Karaman, Varol Lütfü Aksungur Department of Dermatology, Çukurova University, Faculty of Medicine, Adana, TurkeyCorrespondence: Ahmet Doğukan Dağdaş, Cukurova University, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Dermatology, Adana, 01330, Turkey, Tel +90 506 8326195, Fax +90 322 3387144, Email dogukan1993@hotmail.comBackground: Although dedicated dermatology wards have been closed in some countries, they continue to exist in others. Inpatient consultations requested from dermatologists have been investigated widely. However, those requested by dermatologists have been taken into consideration only in a few studies.Objective: This study aimed to investigate such consultations, particularly in the context of diagnoses, reasons, and consulting specialties.Methods: Patients admitted to the dermatology ward of a tertiary hospital in Turkey between January 2019 and August 2021 were retrospectively analyzed.Results: The most common diagnoses were non-pustular psoriasis (11.5%), pruritus (10.9%), and urticaria (10.6%) in 548 admissions with a median length of stay of 15.1 days. There were 1712 consultations. Their number per admission was positively correlated with patient’s age and length of stay. Highest numbers were observed in admissions with a diagnosis of bullous pemphigoid, leg ulcers, lupus erythematosus, pustular psoriasis, hidradenitis suppurativa, and pemphigus. Reasons for consultation were management of comorbidity (53.8%), evaluation for drug precaution (19.1%), investigation for etiology (12.8%), evaluation for systemic involvement (6.0%), taking treatment advice (5.4%), obtaining biopsy (3.0%), and differential diagnosis (1.9%).Conclusion: Our findings showed that the number of consultations per admission was high, and the most common reason for consultation was comorbidity, indicating that, practically, there are no more pure dermatological patients. Therefore, if dedicated dermatology wards will continue to exist, in order to lower the number of consultations so length of stay, dermatologist should be trained in a manner so that they have more knowledge about common comorbidities.Keywords: inpatient dermatology, consultation, ward, length of stay, comorbidityhttps://www.dovepress.com/investigation-of-consultations-requested-by-dermatology-inpatient-peer-reviewed-fulltext-article-CCIDinpatient dermatologyconsultationwardlength of staycomorbidity
spellingShingle Dağdaş AD
Fettahlioglu Karaman B
Aksungur VL
Investigation of Consultations Requested by Dermatology Inpatient
Clinical, Cosmetic and Investigational Dermatology
inpatient dermatology
consultation
ward
length of stay
comorbidity
title Investigation of Consultations Requested by Dermatology Inpatient
title_full Investigation of Consultations Requested by Dermatology Inpatient
title_fullStr Investigation of Consultations Requested by Dermatology Inpatient
title_full_unstemmed Investigation of Consultations Requested by Dermatology Inpatient
title_short Investigation of Consultations Requested by Dermatology Inpatient
title_sort investigation of consultations requested by dermatology inpatient
topic inpatient dermatology
consultation
ward
length of stay
comorbidity
url https://www.dovepress.com/investigation-of-consultations-requested-by-dermatology-inpatient-peer-reviewed-fulltext-article-CCID
work_keys_str_mv AT dagdasad investigationofconsultationsrequestedbydermatologyinpatient
AT fettahlioglukaramanb investigationofconsultationsrequestedbydermatologyinpatient
AT aksungurvl investigationofconsultationsrequestedbydermatologyinpatient