Publications by authors named "R Taberner"

Article Synopsis
  • The review highlights the growing complexity of dermatology, with advancements in cosmetic procedures, AI, tele-dermatology, and social media creating new bioethical challenges in practice.
  • Conducting extensive research across multiple databases, the authors aim to identify these conflicts while examining relevant ethical guidelines in both Spanish and American contexts.
  • They emphasize the importance of declaring conflicts of interest and maintaining patient autonomy, advocating for updated deontological codes to address the ethical dilemmas arising from modern dermatology innovations.
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Both the functions and equipment of dermatologists have increased over the past few years, some examples being cosmetic dermatology, artificial intelligence, tele-dermatology, and social media, which added to the pharmaceutical industry and cosmetic selling has become a source of bioethical conflicts. The objective of this narrative review is to identify the bioethical conflicts of everyday dermatology practice and highlight the proposed solutions. Therefore, we conducted searches across PubMed, Web of Science and Scopus databases.

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Background: Several studies support the hypothesis that scabies is on the rise in Spain. There are also concerns about the possible development of resistance to treatment and an increase in atypical presentations. The aims of this study were to describe the demographic and clinical characteristics of patients with scabies seen by dermatologists in Spain, to identify the possible emergence of atypical forms of scabies, and to explore the frequency of treatment failures and associated risk factors.

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Background: Visits for skin conditions are very common in pediatric primary care, and many of the patients seen in outpatient dermatology clinics are children or adolescents. Little, however, has been published about the true prevalence of these visits or about their characteristics.

Material And Methods: Observational cross-sectional study of diagnoses made in outpatient dermatology clinics during 2 data-collection periods in the anonymous DIADERM National Random Survey of dermatologists across Spain.

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