RESUMEN
Falls in non-COVID-19-related hospital admissions during the pandemic affected the reasons for dermatology consultation and mode of consultation delivery. In order to assess the impact of the pandemic and the effects of telehealth on the inpatient dermatology service, we compared consultations completed between March 17, 2020 and October 31, 2020 with the same period of 2019. Dermatology received fewer consultations for management assistance during the pandemic, possibly due to patients with chronic dermatoses not meeting admission criteria or avoiding hospitalization. Consultations were also less likely to require laboratory work, imaging, and biopsies in 2020, potentially due to frequent consultation of benign conditions enabled by telehealth and stricter enforcement of only completing the biopsies necessary for acute inpatient management. Despite the shift toward remote consultations in 2020, the impact on diagnosis and management remained unchanged compared to 2019. Providers were less likely to document clinical improvement in 2020, potentially attributable to inferior communication regarding management recommendations or an increase in diagnoses not expected to improve. While remote consultations allowed dermatologists to provide comparable care during the pandemic, further research on clinical outcomes of remote consultations is required to maximize its benefits to patients and the healthcare system. (SKINmed. 2022;20:197-204).