Since the foundation of imito, we've heard this phrase from medical staff many times. Why keep searching for the right words when a photo can remind you of the overall status very quickly? Specialists often have little time to read through the entire wound description before an appointment, but want to remember the condition of the wound quickly and easily.
60+ Swiss and German hospitals use imito for medical photo documentation. Overall, imito is used in over 35 different departments, including neurology, cardiology, geriatrics, orthopaedics and plastic surgery.
The typical wound description of a pressure ulcer includes the documentation of the category, wound cavity, tissue types, wound depth, as well as the amount and nature of the exudate.
imito's software offers pre-set options with technical terms to choose from for the wound description, ensuring that all relevant information is captured. In that way, even less experienced staff is able to describe wounds accurately.
In imitoWound, the wound description can be exported as a PDF through just a few clicks. Our users often share this PDF wound report digitally with their colleagues. However, it is also often printed out to share with other medical institutions. The wound report is important for ongoing care and for referrals to specialists.
Even though we are big fans of standardised wound documentation, we are aware that wound managers always need the freedom to document case-specific details.
This is why there are as well many free text fields in our digital wound documentation. Every documentation detail and technical term is customisable for your institution. Florian and Christoph are happy to help you with this!
Our customers are also constantly surprised by the fact that pictures s they take with any common smartphone appear immediately in their hospital information system. Our two IT project managers integrate imito seamlessly into your systems. Listen to what Michaela Keller from Medical IT at Spital Thurgau has to say about working with our team.
Thanks to funding from Innosuisse, we are developing in close collaboration with Prof. Sebastian Probst and the University of Geneva a serious game that aims to teach important wound care skills to everyone involved in the care of wound patients in a playful way.
The game involves assessing a variety of different real-life wound images of patients with pressure ulcers, diabetic foot syndrome, burns, traumatic wounds or ulcus cruris and assigning the correct technical terms to them.
We want to enable a digital, standardised wound description that is based on expert standards such as the recommendations of the ICW (Chronic Wound Initiative in Germany).
By using imitoWound, healthcare professionals can precisely measure, photograph and document wounds using smartphones or tablets. These digital records enable accurate observation of the wound healing process and facilitate communication between the doctors & wound managers involved in the treatment.
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