Practitioner characteristics, diagnostic accuracy metrics and discovering-individual
The fifth publication utilizing SCARD (and part of 3 papers by the same research team) was published in April 2023 with the Australasian Journal of Dermatology
Works published in medical journals.
The fifth publication utilizing SCARD (and part of 3 papers by the same research team) was published in April 2023 with the Australasian Journal of Dermatology
The fourth publication utilizing SCARD (and part of 3 papers by the same research team) was in May 2022 with the Australasian Journal of Dermatology in a paper called “Characteristics, treatment, and outcomes of 589 melanoma patients documented by 27 general practitioners on the Skin Cancer Audit Research Database.”
The third publication utilizing SCARD (and part of 3 papers by the same research team) was in August 2021 with the Australasian Journal of Dermatology in a paper called “Characteristics of 637 melanomas documented by 27 general practitioners on the Skin Cancer Audit Research Database.”
“Dermatoscopy: Pattern analysis of pigmented and non-pigmented lesions” is a comprehensive guide to the use of dermatoscopy in diagnosing pigmented and non-pigmented skin lesions.
The fourth publication utilizing SCARD (and part of 3 papers by the same research team) was in May 2022 with the Australasian Journal of Dermatology in a paper called “Characteristics, treatment, and outcomes of 589 melanoma patients documented by 27 general practitioners on the Skin Cancer Audit Research Database.”
The fourth publication utilizing SCARD (and part of 3 papers by the same research team) was in May 2022 with the Australasian Journal of Dermatology in a paper called “Characteristics, treatment, and outcomes of 589 melanoma patients documented by 27 general practitioners on the Skin Cancer Audit Research Database.”
The second publication utilizing SCARD was in the International Journal of Dermatology in a paper called “The impact of subspecialization and dermatoscopy use on accuracy of melanoma diagnosis among primary care doctors in Australia.”
The first publication about SCARD was in the International Journal of Dermatology in a paper called “Measuring Performance in skin cancer practice: the SCARD Initiative.”