DIABETIC FOOT RISK CLASSIFICATION IN A TERTIARY CARE TEACHING HOSPITAL OF PESHAWAR
Main Article Content
Abstract
Objective:
To find out diabetic foot risk classification in patients admitted with diabetes mellitus at a
Material and Methods:
The hospital record of one hundred and twenty seven patients of diabetes mellitus,
admitted to the medicine department, Khyber teaching hospital Peshawar from 1st October 2005 to 31st
March 2006 were evaluated against the Royal College of Physicians, London; Clinical Guidelines for Type
2 diabetes: prevention and management of foot problems. Both male and female indoor patients above 15
years of age were included in the study.
Results:
An audit of 127 diabetes mellitus patient revealed that 25 (19.68%) patients were having low
current risk, 21 (16.53%) were classified as having risk foot, 6 (4.72%) were categorized as high risk
patients, 16 (12.59%) were admitted with ulcerated foot and 5 (3.39%) were having diabetic foot
emergency according to Royal College of Physicians, London; Clinical Guidelines for Type 2 diabetes:
prevention and management of foot problems.
Conclusion:
The main reason for poor diabetic foot outcomes in the tertiary care teaching hospital is the
absence of classification of majority of diabetic patients into different risk groups for the appropriate
treatment. This lack of risk classification results in ensuing gaps in the management and an overall
increase in morbidity.
tertiary care teaching hospital.
Article Details
Work published in JPMI is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 Generic License.
Authors are permitted and encouraged to post their work online (e.g., in institutional repositories or on their website) prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work.