AN AUDIT OF DIABETIC FOOT CARE SERVICES AT A TERTIARY CARE HOSPITAL- A TIMELY INITIATIVE

Authors

  • Dr Faheem Ullah Assistant Professor Endocrinology Mercy Teaching Hospital Author
  • Dr Ahmad Javaid Resident Cardiologist in Ayub Teaching Hospital Abbottabad Author
  • Dr Hidayat Ullah Medical Officer, Department of Surgery, Peshawar General Hospital Author
  • Dr Ruma Mustafa Casualty Medical Officer, Siddique Surgical Hospital Author
  • Dr Qazi Adam Asfandyar Post Graduate Resident, Department of Surgery, Khyber Teaching Hospital Author
  • Dr Zun Noor Ahmad Post Graduate Resident, Department of Surgery, Khyber Teaching Hospital Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.62019/r520fr09

Keywords:

Diabetes foot care, diabetic foot ulcer, guidelines, clinical audit

Abstract

Objectives: The aim of the following study is to determine the pooled prevalence of complications related to diabetes mellites at a tertiary care hospital and to create awareness among junior doctors to further improve the diabetic foot care services in the form of a standards audit.

Materials and Methods: This clinical audit was conducted in a cross-sectional pattern and data pertaining to all admitted patients related to diabetes mellites and its complications from the surgical department was collected from July 2024 to December 2024. A total of 125 patients were enrolled, either admitted through OPD or emergency. The variables that were included in the study are the following: name, age, gender, contact number, date of admission, medical record number (MR number), characteristics of diabetic foot ulcer (if present), the treatment given, and the outcome. Data was collected in a pre-designed proforma, added to Microsoft excel sheet and analyzed through SPSS software version 23.0. The data is described in the form of description, charts, and tables.

Results: The mean duration of diabetes mellites in years was 4.81 ± 0.132 with most patients falling in the range of 5 years (36%). The mean HbA1c and RBS levels on admission were 7.01 ± 0.44 and 227.8 ± 5.3 respectively. In terms of duration of ulcer formation, 22.4% patients had the ulcer for 5 months, which was the longest. As far as management and outcomes are concerned, just17.6% patients showed compliance with medication, but only 19.2% progressed towards an amputation.

Conclusion: The audit has given us a further clue that the prevalence of diabetic foot ulcers in our province is still high. However, effective and timely steps can reduce this complication.

 

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2025-06-14

How to Cite

AN AUDIT OF DIABETIC FOOT CARE SERVICES AT A TERTIARY CARE HOSPITAL- A TIMELY INITIATIVE. (2025). Journal of Medical & Health Sciences Review, 2(2). https://doi.org/10.62019/r520fr09

Similar Articles

11-20 of 161

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.