Quinton Thomas R, Lazzarini Peter A, Boyle Frances M, Russell Anthony W, Armstrong David G
Department of Prosthetics, Orthotics, & Podiatry, Princess Alexandra Hospital, Ipswich Road Woolloongabba, QLD 4102 Brisbane, Australia ; School of Population Health, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.
Allied Health Research Collaborative, Metro North Hospital & Health Service, Queensland Health, Brisbane, Australia ; School of Clinical Sciences, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia.
J Foot Ankle Res. 2015 Apr 18;8:16. doi: 10.1186/s13047-015-0072-y. eCollection 2015.
Diabetic foot complications are the leading cause of lower extremity amputation and diabetes-related hospitalisation in Australia. Studies demonstrate significant reductions in amputations and hospitalisation when health professionals implement best practice management. Whilst other nations have surveyed health professionals on specific diabetic foot management, to the best of the authors' knowledge this appears not to have occurred in Australia. The primary aim of this study was to examine Australian podiatrists' diabetic foot management compared with best practice recommendations by the Australian National Health Medical Research Council.
A 36-item Australian Diabetic Foot Management survey, employing seven-point Likert scales (0 = Never; 7 = Always) to measure multiple aspects of best practice diabetic foot management was developed. The survey was briefly tested for face and content validity. The survey was electronically distributed to Australian podiatrists via professional associations. Demographics including sex, years treating patients with diabetes, employment-sector and patient numbers were also collected. Chi-squared and Mann Whitney U tests were used to test differences between sub-groups.
Three hundred and eleven podiatrists responded; 222 (71%) were female, 158 (51%) from the public sector and 11-15 years median experience. Participants reported treating a median of 21-30 diabetes patients each week, including 1-5 with foot ulcers. Overall, participants registered median scores of at least "very often" (>6) in their use of most items covering best practice diabetic foot management. Notable exceptions were: "never" (1 (1 - 3)) using total contact casting, "sometimes" (4 (2 - 5)) performing an ankle brachial index, "sometimes" (4 (1 - 6)) using University of Texas Wound Classification System, and "sometimes" (4 (3 - 6) referring to specialist multi-disciplinary foot teams. Public sector podiatrists reported higher use or access on all those items compared to private sector podiatrists (p < 0.01).
This study provides the first baseline information on Australian podiatrists' adherence to best practice diabetic foot guidelines. It appears podiatrists manage large caseloads of people with diabetes and are generally implementing best practice guidelines recommendations with some notable exceptions. Further studies are required to identify barriers to implementing these recommendations to ensure all Australians with diabetes have access to best practice care to prevent amputations.
在澳大利亚,糖尿病足并发症是下肢截肢和糖尿病相关住院治疗的主要原因。研究表明,当卫生专业人员实施最佳实践管理时,截肢和住院率会显著降低。虽然其他国家已就糖尿病足的具体管理对卫生专业人员进行了调查,但据作者所知,澳大利亚尚未开展此类调查。本研究的主要目的是将澳大利亚足病医生的糖尿病足管理情况与澳大利亚国家卫生与医学研究委员会的最佳实践建议进行比较。
制定了一项包含36个条目的澳大利亚糖尿病足管理调查问卷,采用七点李克特量表(0 = 从不;7 = 总是)来衡量糖尿病足最佳实践管理的多个方面。该调查问卷进行了简要的表面效度和内容效度测试。通过专业协会以电子方式将调查问卷分发给澳大利亚的足病医生。还收集了包括性别、治疗糖尿病患者的年限、就业部门和患者数量等人口统计学信息。使用卡方检验和曼-惠特尼U检验来测试亚组之间的差异。
311名足病医生做出了回应;其中222名(71%)为女性,158名(51%)来自公共部门,中位从业经验为11 - 15年。参与者报告称,他们每周治疗的糖尿病患者中位数为21 - 30名,其中包括1 - 5名足部溃疡患者。总体而言,在使用涵盖糖尿病足最佳实践管理的大多数项目方面,参与者的中位得分至少为“非常频繁”(>6)。明显的例外情况是:“从不”(1(1 - 3))使用全接触石膏,“有时”(4(2 - 5))进行踝肱指数测量,“有时”(4(1 - 6))使用德克萨斯大学伤口分类系统,以及“有时”(4(3 - 6))转诊至专科多学科足部治疗团队。与私营部门的足病医生相比,公共部门的足病医生在所有这些项目上报告的使用或获取情况更高(p < 0.01)。
本研究提供了关于澳大利亚足病医生遵循糖尿病足最佳实践指南的首个基线信息。足病医生似乎负责管理大量糖尿病患者,并且总体上正在实施最佳实践指南建议,但存在一些明显的例外情况。需要进一步开展研究以确定实施这些建议的障碍,以确保所有澳大利亚糖尿病患者都能获得最佳实践护理,从而预防截肢。