Oregon Health & Science University School of Nursing, La Grande, Oregon.
Wound Manag Prev. 2020 Apr;66(4):16-25. doi: 10.25270/wmp.2020.4.1625.
Research that explores foot self-care practices and clinical foot care recommendations for persons with diabetes mellitus is limited.
The aim of this systematic review was to understand the gaps between the American Diabetes Association clinical recommendations on preventive foot self-care and perceptions of and actions taken by patients with diabetes and diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs).
PubMed, the Cumulative Index of Nursing and Allied Health Literature, Cochrane Online Library, Psychological Information Database, and Google Scholar were systematically searched for qualitative research literature published in English from January 1, 2001, to October 21, 2016, using the MeSH terms diabetes mellitus, diabetic foot ulcers, foot care, experiences, and perception to examine the experiences of patients with diabetes regarding foot self-care practices. Publications were screened for inclusion according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses, and The Standard for Reporting Qualitative Research was used to appraise trustworthiness and publication bias. Publication details (author, year, title, country in which the study was conducted, and the type of publication), study aims, design (study methodology, method of sampling, and analysis method), and participant details were abstracted to Excel sheets for analysis of foot self-care experiences and to determine common themes (foot self-care issues) among patients with diabetes.
Of the 14 publications identified, 9 (that included 113 patients with diabetes [95 with or history of DFUs and 18 with no DFUs] and 28 health care professionals [14 podiatrists, 8 physicians, and 6 registered nurses]) met the inclusion criteria for analysis. Research included 4 qualitative descriptive design studies, 2 descriptive phenomenology studies, 1 grounded theory study, 1 interpretive phenomenology study, and 1 exploratory qualitative design study. Four (4) studies were found to lack transparency, and 7 studies did not address trustworthiness. The common themes identified were the high clinical and lifestyle burden of DFUs, poor foot self-care knowledge, perception barriers and resistance, adoption of self-management practices, and discordance between patient and provider impressions and expectations.
Several barriers to optimal foot care in persons with diabetes with and without foot ulcers were identified and may be explained and addressed by considering the Health Belief Model. Clinical interventions should be individualized to identify and address patient-specific barriers to optimal foot self-care. Future clinical studies are needed to examine the outcomes of individualized interventions.
探索糖尿病患者足部自我护理实践和临床足部护理建议的研究有限。
本系统评价的目的是了解美国糖尿病协会关于预防足部自我护理的临床建议与糖尿病患者和糖尿病足溃疡(DFU)患者的看法和采取的行动之间的差距。
系统检索了 2001 年 1 月 1 日至 2016 年 10 月 21 日发表的英文定性研究文献,使用 MeSH 术语糖尿病、糖尿病足溃疡、足部护理、经验和感知,在 PubMed、Cumulative Index of Nursing and Allied Health Literature、Cochrane Online Library、Psychological Information Database 和 Google Scholar 上搜索有关糖尿病患者足部自我护理实践经验的文献。根据系统评价和荟萃分析的首选报告项目以及定性研究报告标准,筛选出版物是否符合纳入标准,以评估可信度和发表偏倚。将出版物的详细信息(作者、年份、标题、研究所在国家以及出版物类型)、研究目的、设计(研究方法、抽样方法和分析方法)和参与者的详细信息摘录到 Excel 表中,以分析足部自我护理经验,并确定糖尿病患者的共同主题(足部自我护理问题)。
确定的 14 篇文献中有 9 篇(包括 113 例糖尿病患者[95 例有或有糖尿病足溃疡史,18 例无糖尿病足溃疡史]和 28 名医疗保健专业人员[14 名足病医生、8 名医生和 6 名注册护士])符合分析标准。研究包括 4 项定性描述性设计研究、2 项描述性现象学研究、1 项扎根理论研究、1 项解释性现象学研究和 1 项探索性定性设计研究。有 4 项研究被发现缺乏透明度,7 项研究未解决可信度问题。确定的共同主题是糖尿病足溃疡患者的高临床和生活方式负担、足部自我护理知识差、感知障碍和抵抗力、自我管理实践的采用以及患者和提供者印象和期望之间的不和谐。
确定了一些影响糖尿病患者(有和无足部溃疡)足部护理的障碍因素,这些障碍因素可能可以通过考虑健康信念模型来解释和解决。临床干预措施应个体化,以确定和解决患者最佳足部自我护理的具体障碍。需要进行未来的临床研究来检查个体化干预措施的结果。