Podiatry Arena » General » Foot Surgery
Integration of podiatric surgery within an orthopaedic department: An audit of patient satisfaction
Welcome to the Podiatry Arena forums, for communication between foot health professionals about podiatry and related topics.
You are currently viewing our podiatry forum as a guest which gives you limited access to view all podiatry discussions and access our other features. By joining our free global community of Podiatrists and other interested foot health care professionals you will have access to post podiatry topics (answer and ask questions), communicate privately with other members (PM), upload content, view attachments, receive a weekly email update of new discussions, earn CPD points and access many other special features. Registered users do not get displayed the advertisments in posted messages. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our global Podiatry community today!
If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact us.
Integration of podiatric surgery within an orthopaedic department: An audit of patient satisfaction with labour force implications.
Armanasco P, Williamson D, Yates B. Foot (Edinb). 2012 May 28. [Epub ahead of print]
Quote:
BACKGROUND:
Podiatric surgery is well established in the National Health Service (NHS) in the UK with over 50 podiatric surgery units. This paper aimed to evaluate patient experience and satisfaction following foot surgery within a NHS orthopaedic department before and after the appointment of a podiatric surgeon. It highlights relevant labour force issues.
METHODOLOGY:
88 patients operated on by a podiatric surgeon were asked to complete an anonymous foot surgery satisfaction questionnaire. The same questionnaire was sent to another random selection of 88 orthopaedic patients matched by Office of Population, Censuses and Surveys Classification of Surgical Operations and Procedures code (OPCS).
RESULTS:
Of the 88 questionnaires sent to each group 56 (63.6%) were returned to the (podiatric group) and 60 (68.2%) the (orthopaedic). Patient satisfaction was rated as excellent 63.7%, moderate/good 23.6% and poor 12.7% of podiatric respondents and excellent 43.4%, moderate 17% and poor 39.6% of orthopaedic respondents.
CONCLUSION:
The results suggest that patient satisfaction following foot surgery rose significantly following appointment of a podiatric surgeon. Improvements were identified in the overall outcome of the surgery and other aspects of the patients' journey. To date we are not aware of any study that has reviewed outcomes of an integrated approach and, as such provides a historical benchmark.