Intervention study of a foot‐care programme enhancing knowledge and practice among nurses and care workers at in‐home service providers

Abstract Aim To evaluate the foot‐care educational programme for nurses and care workers at in‐home service providers. Design A non‐randomized controlled study with random cluster sampling method. Methods Study participants were nurses and care workers of 21 in‐home service providers, including home...

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Main Authors: Kashiko Fujii, Minna Stolt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-07-01
Series:Nursing Open
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/nop2.479
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spelling doaj-eb6a6e02c79b4173af63326058931e862020-11-25T03:50:16ZengWileyNursing Open2054-10582020-07-01741039105110.1002/nop2.479Intervention study of a foot‐care programme enhancing knowledge and practice among nurses and care workers at in‐home service providersKashiko Fujii0Minna Stolt1Graduate School of Medicine School of Health Sciences Nagoya University Nagoya City JapanDepartment of Nursing Science University of Turku Turku FinlandAbstract Aim To evaluate the foot‐care educational programme for nurses and care workers at in‐home service providers. Design A non‐randomized controlled study with random cluster sampling method. Methods Study participants were nurses and care workers of 21 in‐home service providers, including home‐visit nursing and care providers, 1‐day care service centres or care centres with rehabilitation programme in Japan. Foot‐care programme with foot‐care tools as a package or standard care comprising 3–5 sessions over 2 months was provided to 110 participants (87 were on analysis). The outcomes were changes in foot‐care knowledge and scores in pre–post interventions. Data were analysed with descriptive statistics, t test, logistic regression analysis and ANCOVA. Results Before adjusting for background, total scores of knowledge and practice categories were higher than the baseline in the intervention group (43 participants) compared with the control group (44 participants). After background correction due to potential bias of non‐random cluster sampling, significant between group differences were observed in mean score changes in skin and consultation subscales of the practice category.https://doi.org/10.1002/nop2.479ageingfootnursenursingself‐care
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kashiko Fujii
Minna Stolt
spellingShingle Kashiko Fujii
Minna Stolt
Intervention study of a foot‐care programme enhancing knowledge and practice among nurses and care workers at in‐home service providers
Nursing Open
ageing
foot
nurse
nursing
self‐care
author_facet Kashiko Fujii
Minna Stolt
author_sort Kashiko Fujii
title Intervention study of a foot‐care programme enhancing knowledge and practice among nurses and care workers at in‐home service providers
title_short Intervention study of a foot‐care programme enhancing knowledge and practice among nurses and care workers at in‐home service providers
title_full Intervention study of a foot‐care programme enhancing knowledge and practice among nurses and care workers at in‐home service providers
title_fullStr Intervention study of a foot‐care programme enhancing knowledge and practice among nurses and care workers at in‐home service providers
title_full_unstemmed Intervention study of a foot‐care programme enhancing knowledge and practice among nurses and care workers at in‐home service providers
title_sort intervention study of a foot‐care programme enhancing knowledge and practice among nurses and care workers at in‐home service providers
publisher Wiley
series Nursing Open
issn 2054-1058
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Abstract Aim To evaluate the foot‐care educational programme for nurses and care workers at in‐home service providers. Design A non‐randomized controlled study with random cluster sampling method. Methods Study participants were nurses and care workers of 21 in‐home service providers, including home‐visit nursing and care providers, 1‐day care service centres or care centres with rehabilitation programme in Japan. Foot‐care programme with foot‐care tools as a package or standard care comprising 3–5 sessions over 2 months was provided to 110 participants (87 were on analysis). The outcomes were changes in foot‐care knowledge and scores in pre–post interventions. Data were analysed with descriptive statistics, t test, logistic regression analysis and ANCOVA. Results Before adjusting for background, total scores of knowledge and practice categories were higher than the baseline in the intervention group (43 participants) compared with the control group (44 participants). After background correction due to potential bias of non‐random cluster sampling, significant between group differences were observed in mean score changes in skin and consultation subscales of the practice category.
topic ageing
foot
nurse
nursing
self‐care
url https://doi.org/10.1002/nop2.479
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