Eye and foot checks in patients with diabetes on haemodialysis: Are they done, and who does them?

World J Diabetes

Department of Diabetes and Metabolism, Barts Health NHS Trust, the Royal London Hospital, Whitechapel, London E1 1BB, United Kingdom.

Published: September 2017

Aim: To determine if retinal and foot checks are carried out on patients with diabetes receiving haemodialysis.

Methods: Eighty-four patients with diabetes receiving haemodialysis were asked if they recalled having eye and foot screening in the last year, and if so, by whom was the check done.

Results: Seventy-seven (91.7%) patients recalled having an eye check in the preceding 12 mo. Of these, 52 (67.5%) did so in an ophthalmology clinic, 17 (22%) in retinal screening, three (3.9%) in an optician clinic. Three patients (3.9%) went to both ophthalmology and retinal screening, and two (2.6%) attended an ophthalmology and optician. Seventy (83.3%) patients recalled having a foot check in the preceding 12 mo. Of these, 33 (47.1%) were done by practice nurse, 14 (20%) by a diabetes nurse, 11 (15.7%) by a general practitioner, eight (11.4%) by a chiropodist, and four (5.7%) were each checked by renal nurse, diabetes consultant, junior doctor, or unknown person at a foot clinic.

Conclusion: Most patients with diabetes on haemodialysis are able to recall having an eye check in the last year, although 8.3% could not. A significant proportion of patients could not recall having a foot check (16.7%) in the last year. This baseline audit suggests that an improvement in the rate of foot screening is important to achieve in patients with diabetes on haemodialysis in our unit.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5612834PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4239/wjd.v8.i9.436DOI Listing

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