Mayo Clinic Proceedings: Digital Health (Sep 2024)

Skin and Digital–The 2024 Narrative

  • Dominique du Crest, MBE,
  • Monisha Madhumita, MD,
  • Wendemagegn Enbiale, MD, MPH, PhD,
  • Alexander Zink, MD, MPH, PhD,
  • Art Papier, MD,
  • Gaone Matewa, BBA,
  • Harvey Castro, MD, MBA,
  • Hector Perandones, MD,
  • Josef De Guzman, OD-OPS,
  • Misha Rosenbach, MD,
  • Tu-Anh Duong, MD, PhD,
  • Yu-Chuan Jack Li, MD, PhD,
  • Hugues Cartier, MD,
  • Benjamin Ascher, MD,
  • Sebastien Garson, MD,
  • Alessandra Haddad, MD, PhD,
  • Daniel Z. Liu, MD,
  • Diala Haykal, MD,
  • Jane Yoo, MD, MPP,
  • Nav Paul, MBBS, MRCP,
  • Tracy Cohen Sayag, Mfin,
  • Merete Hædersdal, MD, PhD, DMSc,
  • Esther Freeman, MD, PhD,
  • Lilit Garibyan, MD, PhD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 3
pp. 322 – 330

Abstract

Read online

The global burden of skin diseases affects over 3 billion individuals, posing important public health challenges worldwide, with profound impacts in both high-income and low-income and middle-income countries. These challenges are exacerbated by widespread disparities in access to dermatologic care and the prevalence of misinformation. This article, derived from the Skin and Digital Summit at the International Master Course on Aging Science critically evaluates how digital technologies such as artificial intelligence, teledermatology, and large language models can bridge these access gaps. It explores practical applications and case studies demonstrating the impact of these technologies in various settings, with a particular focus on adapting solutions to meet the diverse needs of low-income and middle-income countries. In addition, the narrative highlights the ongoing conversation within the dermatologic community about the role of digital advances in health care, emphasizing that this discussion is dynamic and the one that is continuously evolving. Dermatologists play an essential role in this transition, integrating digital tools into mainstream care to complement a patient-centered, culturally sensitive approach. The article advocates for a globally coordinated digital response that not only addresses current disparities in skin health care but also promotes equitable access to digital health resources, making dermatologic care more representative of all skin types and accessible worldwide.