| Literature DB >> 25898312 |
Julia Lowe1, R Gary Sibbald2, Nashwah Y Taha1, Gerald Lebovic3, Carlos Martin4, Indira Bhoj4, Rolinda Kirton5, Brian Ostrow6.
Abstract
Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25898312 PMCID: PMC4405371 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001814
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Time course of the Guyana Diabetes and Foot Care Project.
| GUYANA DIABETES AND FOOT CARE PROJECT | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PHASES | Phase 1—CCF Project No 530-0272-G015 | Phase 2—Project No. S064802 | |||||
| Lead organization | Georgetown Public Hospital Corporation | Canadian Association of General Surgeons (CAGS) | |||||
| FUNDING | Can$97,460 | Can$498,925 | |||||
| GOVERNMENT OF CANADA—CANADIAN INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT AGENCY (CIDA) | |||||||
| Item | 2007 | 2008 | 2009 | March 2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 28 Feb 2013 |
|
| • Needs assessment | “Improve health of persons with diabetes in Guyana by developing an enhanced diabetic foot program at the Georgetown Public Hospital Corporation” | “Regionalization of diabetes and diabetic foot care in 6/10 administrative regions comprising 90% [of the] population in Guyana” | ||||
| • Funding application | |||||||
|
| Diabetic Foot Care Centre (DFC) at GPHC | Seven regional diabetic foot care centres were established and staffed, but three were completed only in the last 6 months. | |||||
| Achieved Centre of Excellence status Dec 2009 | |||||||
|
| Interprofessional (MD, nurse, and rehab specialist) teams in two cohorts—eight people at the International Interprofessional Wound Care Course (IIWCC) | • Three cohorts at IIWCC comprising eight people—total in phase 1 and phase 2 = 16 (14 completed, nine retained) | |||||
| • Online diabetes educator course—10 people | |||||||
|
| • Diabetic foot care (3-day workshops) | Diabetes, hypertension, and dyslipidemia care (3-day workshops) in addition to diabetic foot care—delivered by KOL team | |||||
| • Additional 5-day course for pregraduate rehabilitation assistants | |||||||
|
| 65 trained at GPHC | 275 trained at 97 facilities | |||||
|
| • Developed and introduced screen in July 2008 | • 3,452 screens in regions, 65% at high risk | |||||
| • 1,226 patients screened at GPHC, 48% at high risk | • Screen validated in June 2012 | ||||||
|
| • Comprehensive foot assessments with Doppler and skin temps | HbA1c testing began in April 2010—new to Guyana | |||||
| • Care based on context-specific best practices, conservative debridement | • Mean HbA1c of 4,588 people = 8.6% (70.5 mmol/mol) | ||||||
| • Plantar pressure reduction for patients with foot ulcers | • 37.3% tested had HbA1c > 9% (75 mmol/mol) | ||||||
|
| Four visits over 18 months + additional chiropodist visit to train rehab assistants | Six visits over 3 years | |||||
|
| Simplified 60-second foot screening tool approved | • KOL team retained as trainers | |||||
| • Identification and approval of indicators for data collection and development of data collection processes, tools, and human resources. | |||||||
| • Model approved in “Strategic Plan 2013–2020” | |||||||
GDFP database by region, female-to-male ratio (F:M), age, ethnicity and HbA1c.
| Region 1 | Region 2 | Region 3 | Region 4 | Region 5 | Region 6 | Region 7 | Region 8 | Region 9 | Region 10 | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 26,941 (3.6) | 46,810 (6.3) | 107,416 (14.3) | 313,429 (41.9) | 49,723 (6.6) | 109,431 (14.6) | 20,280 (2.7) | 10,190 (1.4) | 24,941 (3.3) | 39,452 (5.3) | 748,613 |
|
| 3 | 541 | 711 | 2,311 | 114 | 624 | 17 | 0 | 2 | 752 | 5,075 |
|
| 1:2 | 2.41 | 2.27 | 1.93 | 2.35 | 1.93 | 0.88 | NA | 1.0 | 2.88 | 2.10 |
|
| Insufficient data | 57.5 (12.0) (20.0–95.6) | 55.4 (11.6) (18.2–80.7) | 56.2 (12.4) (18.1–89.3) | 51.3 (12.1) (18.3–80.4) | 56.9 (11.1) (20.0–91.9) | Insufficient data | Insufficient data | Insufficient data | 59.7 (11.9) (22.9–90.2) | 55.7 (12.4) (18.1–99.7) |
|
| 456 | 569 | 622 | 66 | 577 | 664 | 2,954 | ||||
| East Indian | 335 (73.3) | 423 (72.1) | 272 (37.7) | 32 (50) | 455 (77.8) | 68 (9.7) | 1,585 (53.7%) | ||||
| Afro-Guyanese | 59 (12.9) | 108 (18.4) | 279 (38.7) | 27 (42.2) | 95 (16.2) | 449 (64.1) | 1,017 (34.3%) | ||||
| Amerindian | 8 (1.8) | 2 (0.3) | 16 (2.2) | 2 (0.3) | 2 (0.3) | 62 (8.9) | 92 (3.1%) | ||||
| Mixed | 26 (5.7) | 34 (5.8) | 53 (7.4) | 5 (7.8) | 24 (4.1) | 83 (11.9) | 225 (7.6%) | ||||
| Other | 28 (6.1) | 2 (0.3) | 2 (0.3) | 0 (0) | 1 (0.2) | 2 (0.3) | 35 (1.2%) | ||||
| Mean HbA1c -% SD (range) | 9.8 (2.6) (5.1–16.2) | 9.8 (3.1) (4.4–17.9) | 8.6 (2.7) (4.3–19.2) | 9.6 (3.0) (4.2–17.0) | 8.7 (2.6) (4.7–15.2) | 8.7 (2.5) (4.3–14.9) | 8.6 (2.8) (4.1–19.2) |
#Ostrow B, Sibbald RG, Taha N, Lowe J. Sex disaggregated diabetes prevalence study in Guyana needed. Diabetes Res Clin Pract 2014;106 (2):e17.
*regions with project intervention (DFC and trainings)
†2012 Census preliminary report available at http://www.statisticsguyana.gov.gy/census.html. Accessed 13 Dec 2014.
**Missing or error in data: Region 2,491; Gender 133; Age 2,284; and Ethnicity 4,612.
Comparison of Foot Care Projects.
| Step by Step | Guyana Diabetes and Foot Care Project | The Samadhan System | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Incorporates longitudinal training of HCP with follow-up sessions and hands-on practical training. | Similar educational approach to Step by Step using a formal key opinion leader team (“train the trainer model”). Builds capacity in the public-funded health system through facility development and provision of new clinical tools. | Encourages one specialist to gain knowledge in all areas of diabetes care, including nutritional and podiatric education, in order to provide adequate care in a resource-limited setting. |
| Encourages provider and patient education for knowledge dissemination | Integrated into Ministry of Health Strategic Plan. | ||
|
| Tanzania, India, Sri Lanka, Nepal, and Bangladesh | Guyana | India |
|
| Yes | Yes | No |
|
| Yes | Yes | No |
|
| Yes | Yes | No |
|
| • Restricted to diabetic foot management | • Integrates diabetic foot care into CNCD care in public-funded health system | A cheap (US$1), effective, and simple to use offloading tool was designed and used by author |
| • Spans multiple countries | • Facilitates capacity building through infrastructure (clinic) development and introduction of new clinical tools (e.g., HbA1c testing and plantar pressure redistribution devices) |
1Abbas ZG, Lutale JK, Bakker K, Baker N, Archibald LK. The “Step by Step” Diabetic Foot project in Tanzania: a model for improving patient outcomes in less developed countries. Int Wound J. 2011;8:169–175
2 Shankhdhar K. Improvisation is the key to success: The Samadhan system. Adv Skin Wound Care. 2006;19(7): 379–383