新西兰奥特罗阿足科医生的临床实践如何与预防糖尿病相关足病的国际指南保持一致?横断面调查。

IF 2.5 3区 医学 Q1 ORTHOPEDICS
Hannah Jepson, Peter A Lazzarini, Michele Garrett, Matthew R Carroll
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:考虑到糖尿病患者下肢预防保健的重要性,以及新西兰Aotearoa (NZ)缺乏当地指南,本研究的目的是确定新西兰足科医生用于预防糖尿病相关足病的评估和管理与国际预防指南建议的一致性。方法:采用李克特5分量表(0 = always;5 = never)基于糖尿病足国际工作组(IWGDF) 2019年预防指南,包括参与者人口统计、部门、病例量、指南、筛查、管理、教育和转诊等领域。该调查是通过新西兰足病协会和社交媒体分发给新西兰足病医生的。完成50%项目的参与者被包括在内。使用Mann-Whitney U检验来检验行业亚组之间的差异。结果:收到77份回复(占新西兰足部工作人员的16.3%),其中52人完成了50%的项目并被纳入。在这52名足科医生中,73%来自私营机构。公共部门的足科医生报告了更高的每周糖尿病患者病例量(p = 0.03)和足部溃疡(p结论:新西兰足科医生在筛查、自我保健教育、适当的鞋类和治疗糖尿病相关足部疾病高危人群的危险因素方面通常遵循国际指南建议。然而,在临床实践中可能会出现对极低至中等风险人群的过度筛查。在新西兰,增加获得综合保健、定制鞋类和结构化教育方案的机会似乎是未来可以开发的实践领域,以帮助预防与糖尿病有关的足病。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
How does the clinical practice of Aotearoa New Zealand podiatrists align with international guidelines for the prevention of diabetes-related foot disease? A cross-sectional survey.

Background: Given the importance of preventive care for the lower limb in people with diabetes, and the absence of local guidelines in Aotearoa New Zealand (NZ), the aim of this study was to determine the alignment of assessment and management used in the prevention of diabetes-related foot disease by NZ podiatrists to the international prevention guideline recommendations.

Methods: A 37-item web-based survey was developed using a 5-point Likert scale (0 = always; 5 = never) based on the International Working Group of the Diabetic Foot (IWGDF) 2019 prevention guidelines and included domains on participant demographics, sector, caseloads, guidelines, screening, management, education, and referral. The survey was distributed to NZ podiatrists through the NZ podiatry association and social media. Participants completing > 50% of items were included. The Mann-Whitney U test was used to examine differences between sector subgroups.

Results: Seventy-seven responses (16.3% of the NZ podiatry workforce) were received, of which 52 completed > 50% of items and were included. Of those 52 podiatrists, 73% were from the private sector. Public sector podiatrists reported higher weekly caseloads of patients with diabetes (p = 0.03) and foot ulcers (p < 0.001). The New Zealand Society for the Study of Diabetes (NZSSD) risk stratification pathway and IWGDF guidelines were the two most frequently utilised guidance documents. Participants reported median scores of at least "often" (< 2) for all items in the assessment and management, inspection, examination, and education provision domains for people with a high-risk foot. More than 50% of respondents reported screening more frequently than guideline recommendations for people with a very low to moderate risk foot. Structured education program was only used by 4 (5%) participants. Public sector podiatrists reported greater provision of custom-made footwear (p = 0.04) and multi-disciplinary team care (p = 0.03).

Conclusion: NZ podiatrists generally follow international guideline recommendations with respect to screening, self-care education, appropriate footwear, and treatment of risk factors for people at-risk of diabetes-related foot disease. However there may be over-screening of people with very low to medium risk occurring in clinical practice. Increasing access to integrated healthcare, custom-made footwear and structured educational programmes appear to be areas of practice that could be developed in future to help prevent diabetes-related foot disease in NZ.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
10.30%
发文量
83
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Foot and Ankle Research, the official journal of the Australian Podiatry Association and The College of Podiatry (UK), is an open access journal that encompasses all aspects of policy, organisation, delivery and clinical practice related to the assessment, diagnosis, prevention and management of foot and ankle disorders. Journal of Foot and Ankle Research covers a wide range of clinical subject areas, including diabetology, paediatrics, sports medicine, gerontology and geriatrics, foot surgery, physical therapy, dermatology, wound management, radiology, biomechanics and bioengineering, orthotics and prosthetics, as well the broad areas of epidemiology, policy, organisation and delivery of services related to foot and ankle care. The journal encourages submissions from all health professionals who manage lower limb conditions, including podiatrists, nurses, physical therapists and physiotherapists, orthopaedists, manual therapists, medical specialists and general medical practitioners, as well as health service researchers concerned with foot and ankle care. The Australian Podiatry Association and the College of Podiatry (UK) have reserve funds to cover the article-processing charge for manuscripts submitted by its members. Society members can email the appropriate contact at Australian Podiatry Association or The College of Podiatry to obtain the corresponding code to enter on submission.
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