中央、省级和三级医院的糖尿病足和下肢截肢手术强调了在初级医疗保健层面有组织的足部健康服务的必要性。

Q2 Health Professions Foot Pub Date : 2023-09-01 DOI:10.1016/j.foot.2023.102039
Simiso Ntuli , Dimakatso Maria Letswalo
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:糖尿病足截肢对任何糖尿病患者来说都是一个毁灭性的结果。它们与各种风险因素有关,包括未能对糖尿病足进行风险分层。早期风险分层可以降低初级保健水平(PHC)的足部并发症风险。在南非共和国,初级保健诊所是进入公共医疗系统的第一个入口。未能正确识别、风险分类和转诊这一级别的糖尿病足并发症可能会导致糖尿病患者的临床结果不佳。这项研究着眼于豪登省中央和三级医院糖尿病相关截肢的发生率,以突出PHC级别所需足部健康服务的情况。方法:一项横断面回顾性研究回顾了前瞻性收集的2017年1月至2019年6月期间接受糖尿病相关足和下肢截肢的所有患者的手术室记录数据库。进行推断和描述性统计,并对患者人口统计学、危险因素和截肢类型进行审查。结果:在本报告所述期间,共有1862例糖尿病相关截肢。大多数患者(98%)来自贫困的社会经济背景,年收入为0.00-70000.00南非兰特(0.00-4754.41美元)。大多数截肢手术(62%)发生在男性身上,大多数截肢手术,71%发生在65岁以下的患者身上。73%的病例中第一次截肢是主要原因,75%的患者中感染性足部溃疡是截肢的主要原因。结论:截肢是糖尿病患者临床疗效不佳的标志。由于RSA医疗服务的分级性质,糖尿病相关足部截肢可能意味着RSA PHC级别的糖尿病足部并发症护理或治疗不足。由于无法获得初级保健级别的结构化足部健康服务,阻碍了足部并发症的早期识别和适当的转诊,导致一些患者截肢。
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Diabetic foot and lower limb amputations at central, provincial and tertiary hospitals-underscores the need for organised foot health services at primary healthcare level

Background

Diabetic foot amputations are a devastating outcome for any diabetic patient. They are associated with various risk factors, including failure to risk stratify the diabetic foot. Early risk stratification could lower foot complications risk at the primary healthcare level (PHC). In the Republic of South Africa (RSA), PHC clinics are the first entry point to the public healthcare system. Failure to correctly identify, risk categorise, and refer diabetic foot complications at this level may lead to poor clinical outcomes for diabetic patients. This study looks at the incidence of diabetic-related amputations at central and tertiary hospitals in Gauteng to highlight the case of the needed foot health services at the PHC level.

Methods

A cross-sectional retrospective study that reviewed prospectively collected theatre records database of all patients who underwent a diabetic-related foot and lower limb amputation between January 2017 and June 2019. Inferential and descriptive statistics were performed, and patient demographics, risk factors and type of amputation were reviewed.

Results

There were 1862 diabetic-related amputations in the period under review. Most patients (98 %) came from a poor socioeconomic background earning ZAR 0.00–70 000.00 (USD 0.00–4754.41) per annum. Most amputations, 62 % were in males, and the majority, 71 % of amputations, were in patients younger than 65. The first amputation was major in 73 % of the cases, and an infected foot ulcer was a primary amputation cause in 75 % of patients.

Conclusion

Amputations are a sign of poor clinical outcomes for diabetic patients. Due to the hierarchal nature of healthcare delivery in RSA, diabetic-related foot amputations could imply inadequate care of or access to diabetic foot complications at the PHC level in RSA. A lack of access to structured foot health services at PHC levels impedes early identification of foot complication identification and appropriate referral resulting in amputation in some of the patients.

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来源期刊
Foot
Foot Health Professions-Podiatry
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
37
期刊介绍: The Foot is an international peer-reviewed journal covering all aspects of scientific approaches and medical and surgical treatment of the foot. The Foot aims to provide a multidisciplinary platform for all specialties involved in treating disorders of the foot. At present it is the only journal which provides this inter-disciplinary opportunity. Primary research papers cover a wide range of disorders of the foot and their treatment, including diabetes, vascular disease, neurological, dermatological and infectious conditions, sports injuries, biomechanics, bioengineering, orthoses and prostheses.
期刊最新文献
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