| Literature DB >> 30675187 |
Maija Miikkola1, Tella Lantta1, Riitta Suhonen1,2,3, Minna Stolt1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Foot health is an important aspect of general health, and it can be maintained and promoted through foot self-care. However, little is known about older people's experiences of caring for their feet. The aim of this study was to gather knowledge about experiences of foot self-care from the perspective of healthy older people in order to improve their welfare and their management of foot health.Entities:
Keywords: Focus-group interviews; Foot health; Foot self-care; Older people; Prevention; Qualitative research
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30675187 PMCID: PMC6339366 DOI: 10.1186/s13047-019-0315-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Foot Ankle Res ISSN: 1757-1146 Impact factor: 2.303
Focus group questions (interview guide)
| Questions: | |
| 1. What foot self-care activities do older people perform? | |
| - How do you care for your own feet? | |
| - When do you care for your feet? | |
| 2. What factors are associated with performing foot self-care in older people? | |
| - How do you manage with foot self-care? | |
| - What motivates you to care for your own feet? | |
| - What hampers caring for your own feet? |
Example of analysis process from category name to theme
| Category name | Condensed category name | Abstraction of condensed category name | Code | Sub-category | Category | Theme |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| During winter skin and heels are drier and moisturising is needed all the time | More foot cream in winter when skin is dry | More foot care during winter | Seasonal changes | External factors | Factors associated with foot self-care |
|
| (Foot care) is still modest; although it takes only fifteen minutes it’s laziness | Modest foot care because of laziness, even though time spent is minimal | Modest foot care because of laziness | Personality factors | Internal factors |
Fig. 1Foot self-care in older people based on an inductive content analysis