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Provision of foot health services for people with rheumatoid arthritis in New South Wales: a web-based survey of local podiatrists
Authors
A Blake
A Williams
+42 more
AC Redmond
AE Williams
AE Williams
AE Williams
AF Marsman
Arthritis and Musculoskeletal Alliance
AS Graham
CJ Bowen
CM Sofka
DE Turner
DE Turner
GJ Hendry
GJ Hendry
Gordon J Hendry
J Firth
J Michelson
J Woodburn
Joshua Burns
JS Smolen
K Hennessy
K Rome
K Rome
Kathryn A Gibson
Keith Rome
Kevin Pile
KL Manfreda
Luke Taylor
M van der Leeden
M van der Leeden
MA D'Agostino
MR Backhouse
National Collaborating Centre for Chronic Conditions
O Wilson
P Helliwell
Podiatry Rheumatic Care Association
R Luqmani
RJ Wakefield
SIG Network
SM Bergin
The Royal College of General Practitioners
Verona du Toit
W Fan
Publication date
1 January 2013
Publisher
'Springer Science and Business Media LLC'
Doi
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
Background: It is unclear if podiatric foot care for people with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) in New South Wales (NSW) meets current clinical recommendations. The objective of this study was to survey podiatrists' perceptions of the nature of podiatric foot care provision for people who have RA in NSW.Methods: An anonymous, cross-sectional survey with a web-based questionnaire was conducted. The survey questionnaire was developed according to clinical experience and current foot care recommendations. State registered podiatrists practising in the state of NSW were invited to participate. The survey link was distributed initially via email to members of the Australian Podiatry Association (NSW), and distributed further through snowballing techniques using professional networks. Data was analysed to assess significant associations between adherence to clinical practice guidelines, and private/public podiatry practices.Results: 86 podiatrists participated in the survey (78% from private practice, 22% from public practice). Respondents largely did not adhere to formal guidelines to manage their patients (88%). Only one respondent offered a dedicated service for patients with RA. Respondents indicated that the primary mode of accessing podiatry was by self-referral (68%). Significant variation was observed regarding access to disease and foot specific assessments and treatment strategies. Assessment methods such as administration of patient reported outcome measures, vascular and neurological assessments were not conducted by all respondents. Similarly, routine foot care strategies such as prescription of foot orthoses, foot health advice and footwear were not employed by all respondents.Conclusions: The results identified issues in foot care provision which should be explored through further research. Foot care provision in NSW does not appear to meet the current recommended standards for the management of foot problems in people who have RA. Improvements to foot care could be undertaken in terms of providing better access to examination techniques and treatment strategies that are recommended by evidence based treatment paradigms. © 2013 Hendry et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd
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