Peninsula Health, Allied Health, Frankston, VIC, 3199, Australia.
School of Primary and Allied Health Care, Monash University, Moorooduc Hwy, Frankston, VIC, 3199, Australia.
J Foot Ankle Res. 2021 Feb 3;14(1):11. doi: 10.1186/s13047-021-00449-9.
On the 19th of January, 2020, the Chief Medical Officer of Australia issued a statement about a novel coronavirus, or SARS-CoV-2. Since this date, there have been variable jurisdictional responses, including lockdowns, and restrictions on podiatry practice. This study aimed to describe impacts of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic on the podiatry profession in Australia.
This was a cross sectional study of Australian podiatrists using demographic data collected between 2017 and 2020, and pandemic-related question responses collected between 30th March and 31st August, 2020. Data were collected online and participants described their work settings, patient funding types, business decisions and impacts, and information sources used to guide practice decisions during this time-period. Inductive thematic analysis was used to analyse open-ended questions about their practice impact of SARS-CoV-2.
There were 732 survey responses, with 465 Australian podiatrists or podiatric surgeons providing responses describing pandemic impact. From these responses, 223 (49% of 453) podiatrists reported no supply issues, or having adequate supplies for the foreseeable future with personal protective equipment (PPE) or consumables to support effective infection prevention and control. The most frequent responses about employment, or hours of work, impact were reported in the various categories of "business as usual" (n = 312, 67%). Participants described most frequently using the local state and territory Department of Health websites (n = 347, 75%), and the Australian Podiatry Association (n = 334, 72%) to make decisions about their business. Overarching themes which resounded through open-ended comments was that working through the pandemic was likened to a marathon, and not a sprint. Themes were: (i) commitment to do this, (ii) it's all in the plan, but not everything goes to plan, (iii) my support team must be part of getting through it, (iv) road blocks happen, and (v) nothing is easy, what's next?
Podiatrists in Australia reported variable pandemic impact on their business decisions, PPE stores, and their valued sources of information. Podiatrists also described their "marathon" journey through the pandemic to date, with quotes describing their challenges and highlights. Describing these experiences should provide key learnings for future workforce challenges, should further restrictions come into place.
2020 年 1 月 19 日,澳大利亚首席医疗官就新型冠状病毒(SARS-CoV-2)发表声明。自此,不同司法管辖区做出了不同的反应,包括封锁和限制足病实践。本研究旨在描述 SARS-CoV-2 大流行对澳大利亚足病专业的影响。
这是一项横断面研究,使用 2017 年至 2020 年期间收集的人口统计学数据和 2020 年 3 月 30 日至 8 月 31 日期间收集的大流行相关问题答复,对澳大利亚足病医生进行了研究。数据通过在线收集,参与者描述了他们在此期间的工作环境、患者资金类型、业务决策和影响,以及用于指导实践决策的信息来源。采用归纳主题分析方法分析关于 SARS-CoV-2 对实践影响的开放性问题。
共收到 732 份调查回复,其中 465 名澳大利亚足病医生或足病外科医生提供了描述大流行影响的回复。在这些回复中,有 223 名(453 名中的 49%)足病医生报告没有供应问题,或在可预见的未来有足够的个人防护设备(PPE)或消耗品供应,以支持有效的感染预防和控制。关于就业或工作时间影响的最常见回复是在各种“照常营业”类别中(n=312,67%)。参与者最常描述使用当地州和地区卫生部网站(n=347,75%)和澳大利亚足病协会(n=334,72%)来做出业务决策。贯穿于开放式评论的主题是,应对大流行就像是一场马拉松,而不是短跑。主题是:(i)承诺这样做,(ii)这都在计划中,但并非一切都按计划进行,(iii)我的支持团队必须是度过难关的一部分,(iv)遇到障碍,(v)没有什么是容易的,下一步是什么?
澳大利亚的足病医生报告称,他们的业务决策、PPE 库存以及有价值的信息来源受到了不同程度的大流行影响。足病医生还描述了他们迄今为止通过大流行的“马拉松”之旅,引用了描述他们挑战和亮点的言论。描述这些经验应该为未来的劳动力挑战提供关键经验教训,如果进一步实施限制措施。