City
Epaper

Medical 'selfies' help patients feel satisfied: Study

By IANS | Updated: June 29, 2019 13:55 IST

Taking medical 'selfies' and sharing them with a doctor empowers and reassures patients and can improve their relationship with the medical practitioner, a research has found.

Open in App

"Healthcare consumers feel this data is valuable, it helps them have a sense of autonomy in their care, improves their view of the service they are being provided and it enhances the relationship between doctor and patient because there is a sense of mutual respect and communication," said Kara Burns from the Queensland University of Technology in Australia.

To gauge experiences with and attitudes to consumer-generated health photographs, the researchers conducted a two-part study.

For the study published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research, researchers first interviewed 30 patients, clinic and caregivers.

In the second part, parents were asked to take photos of their children's surgical wounds at the hospital and send it to the surgeon so that he could review healing.

Parents said it improved their confidence in and satisfaction with the medical service and taking the photos was a useful reminder for them to check how the surgical sites were healing.

The findings from the photographic trial supported conclusions drawn from the interview study.

"The parents who took part in the trial said they felt reassured and that the service was going above and beyond. They said normally the door feels shut when you leave a hospital and providing the photos was a way to stay connected and contact the surgeon afterwards," Burns said.

( With inputs from IANS )

Tags: Queensland University Of Technologyaustralia
Open in App

Related Stories

MumbaiEx-Australian Minister John Robb Collapses at PM Narendra Modi’s Mumbai Event

CricketAustralia and Pakistan Qualify for Hong Kong Sixes 2025 Semis

CricketShreyas Iyer Admitted to ICU in Sydney After Suffering Internal Bleeding From Rib Injury

CricketAustralia vs Bangladesh Live Cricket Streaming: When and Where to Watch AUS-W vs BAN-W ICC Women’s World Cup 2025 Match 17

CricketVirat Kohli Spotted at Delhi Airport Ahead of India's Tour of Australia, Video Goes Viral

स्वास्थ्य Realted Stories

HealthDelhi-NCR's AQI remains in 'very poor' range, six stations cross 400 mark

HealthNew genetic tool reveals chromosome changes linked to pregnancy loss: Study

HealthHypertension affects brain much earlier than expected: Study

HealthFive people die of dengue in Bangladesh, 2025 death toll crosses 330

HealthK'taka blackbuck death toll rises to 29; initial probe points to bacterial infection