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Barriers and enablers to providing preventative and early intervention diabetes-related foot care: A qualitative study of primary care healthcare professionals' perceptions

journal contribution
posted on 2021-08-01, 00:00 authored by Leanne Mullan, Andrea DriscollAndrea Driscoll, Karen WynterKaren Wynter, Bodil RasmussenBodil Rasmussen

This study explored the perceived healthcare system and process barriers and enablers experienced by GPs and Credentialled Diabetes Educators (CDEs) in Australian primary care, in the delivery of preventative and early intervention foot care to people with diabetes. A qualitative design with inductive analysis approach was utilised and reported according to the Consolidated Criteria for Reporting Qualitative Studies (COREQ). Semi-structured interviews were conducted with two GPs and 14 CDEs from rural, urban and metropolitan areas of Australia. Participants were from New South Wales, South Australia, Victoria, Western Australia, the Northern Territory and Queensland. Barriers to providing foot care constituted five broad themes: (1) lack of access to footcare specialists and services; (2) education and training insufficiencies; (3) human and physical resource limitations related to funding inadequacies; (4) poor care integration such as inadequate communication and feedback across services and disciplines, and ineffectual multidisciplinary care; and (5) deficient footcare processes and guidelines including ambiguous referral pathways. Enablers to foot care were found at opposing ends of the same spectra as the identified barriers or were related to engaging in mentorship programs and utilising standardised assessment tools. This is the first Australian study to obtain information from GPs and CDEs about the perceived barriers and enablers influencing preventative and early intervention diabetes-related foot care. Findings offer an opportunity for the development and translation of effective intervention strategies across health systems, policy, funding, curriculum and clinical practice, in order to improve outcomes for people with diabetes.

History

Journal

Australian Journal of Primary Health

Volume

27

Issue

4

Pagination

319 - 327

Publisher

CSIRO Publishing

Location

Melbourne, Vic

ISSN

1448-7527

eISSN

1836-7399

Language

English

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal