757 Focusing the Lens on Burn Wound Photography: An Institutional Assessment
Nicolas Malkoff, Brigette Cannata, Artur Manasyan, Idean Roohani, Tayla Moshal, Elaine Terr, Misato Koizumi, Maxwell B Johnson, Justin Gillenwater

TL;DR
This study evaluates the quality of burn wound photography at a medical center and finds it inconsistent, aiming to improve practices through a standardized protocol.
Contribution
The study introduces a wound photography rating scale and identifies specific areas for improvement in clinical burn wound photography.
Findings
Only 17% of burn wound photographs scored 10 or more on a 14-point quality scale.
Most photographs lacked a solid-colored backdrop, proper lighting, and necessary scales for measurement.
Patient ID was included in 98% of photos, but only one photo included a scale like a ruler.
Abstract
Wound photography plays a critical role in burn care. In addition to written descriptions, photographs document wound changes and inform management decisions. Furthermore, photographs may be utilized for academic purposes such as teaching and research. With the development of smartphones, clinical photography has become faster and easier but has seen a decline in consistency and overall image quality. This study aims to evaluate the quality of burn wound photography at our institution to identify areas for improvement and inform efforts to develop a standardized photography protocol. A wound photography rating scale with seven categories and 14 total points was developed based on published recommendations. Individual categories include background (2 max), distractors (2 max), lighting (2 max), camera position (1 max), wound capture (3 max), anatomic orientation (2 max), and patient ID…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsWound Healing and Treatments · Digital Imaging in Medicine
