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Hi everyone, I'm in my first year of podiatry and we need to find the epidemiology incindence, prevalence and male/female ratio and I'm struggling to find an updated information.
Any ideas?
I can't access yet to the British Society of Chiropodists and Podiatrists ( that's another story)
I've done all that but all the information i found was related to either diabetes or vascular problems. THere is nothing specific just about gangrene ( we need incidence, prevalence and male/female ratio) and is very frustrating not being able to find anything specific without involving diabetes ( I know they are closely related )
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Craig Payne
Department of Podiatry
La Trobe University
Melbourne, Australia http://www.latrobe.edu.au/podiatry
__________________________________________________ ___________________________________ God put me on this earth to accomplish a certain number of things - right now I am so far behind, I will never die.
The views expressed above are those of the author and not that of La Trobe University This is where I am, where are you?
I've done all that but all the information i found was related to either diabetes or vascular problems.
Duh!
What do think CAUSES gangrene 99% of the time??????
(Almost) every condition has an AETIOLOGY, right?...
Try some basic vascular surgery texts, then start cruising PubMed for articles once you have your head firmly around what you are trying to understand.
LL
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***************************************** Remember, it's just a foot.
And why do you think that your tutors have phrased the question in that way? To try to make you think, perhaps? To try to have you explore the many many available sources of information?
Please do not make rude postings. This is an international forum and you have been answered by eminent practitioners from the other side of the world who are also trying to help you think.
To everyone, I apologise if I made a rude posting, I didn't realised I was being rude. Sorry.
I am sure you are all right about all the comments, WJ Liggins deffinetly the question is to make us think, and now that you mentioned it's very logical it's a way to make us explore different sources of information.
LuckyLisfranc we did look into diabetes and vascular literature but we really thought we could find the statistics records about gangrene regardless the causes. Obviously we didn't think it could just be an excercise to test how to find information. Which leads to
Craig Payne, I think you might be right maybe that specific information it doesn't exist
However I really apreciated the information received and the help you all gave me. This will be a good reflection excersise for us (1st year students) It defenitely helped me to be more careful about how to read questions. Also it helped me to see there is a big comunity willing to help each other. Thaks a lot. I'll keep you posted about the results :-) and again, I'm sorry if I offended anyone, I did not mean it.
Google Scholar and PubMed will give you access to far more info than simply searching through books in the library. Both the written word and electronic data (including forums like this:p) are valuable sources of information for anyone undertaking research, at whatever level.
An update
We finished the work and you were right WJ Liggins it was more a research project than anything else. We did get quite good peer review therefore we were very pleased.
To all of you who gave me some advise THANK YOU very much.