The unique multidisciplinarity of diabetes‐related foot disease

Author:

van Netten Jaap J.12ORCID,Apelqvist Jan3,Bus Sicco A.12,Fitridge Robert4ORCID,Game Fran5,Monteiro‐Soares Matilde6789,Senneville Eric10ORCID,Schaper Nicolaas C.11

Affiliation:

1. Department of Rehabilitation Medicine Amsterdam UMC University of Amsterdam Amsterdam the Netherlands

2. Amsterdam Movement Sciences, Program Rehabilitation Amsterdam the Netherlands

3. Department of Endocrinology University Hospital of Malmö Malmö Sweden

4. Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences University of Adelaide Adelaide South Australia Australia

5. Research and Development Department University Hospitals of Derby and Burton NHS Foundation Trust Derby UK

6. Portuguese Red Cross School of Health – Lisbon Lisbon Portugal

7. Cross I&D Lisbon Portugal

8. MEDCIDS – Departamento de Medicina da Comunidade Informação e Decisão em Saúde Faculty of Medicine of the University of Porto Porto Portugal

9. RISE@ CINTESIS Faculty of Medicine Oporto University Porto Portugal

10. Department of Infectious Diseases Gustave Dron Hospital Univ‐lille Tourcoing France

11. Division Endocrinology MUMC+, CARIM and CAPHRI Institute Maastricht the Netherlands

Abstract

AbstractFew diseases globally require treatment from so many different disciplines as diabetes‐related foot disease. At least 25 different professionals may be involved: casting technicians, dermatologists, diabetes (educator) nurses, diabetologists, dieticians, endocrinologists, general practitioners, human movement scientists, infectious diseases experts, microbiologists, nuclear medicine physicians, orthopaedic surgeons, orthotists, pedorthists, physical therapists, plastic surgeons, podiatric surgeons, podiatrists, prosthetists, psychologists, radiologists, social workers, tissue viability physicians, vascular surgeons, and wound care nurses. A shared vocabulary and shared treatment goals and recommendations are then essential. The International Working Group on the Diabetic Foot (IWGDF) has produced guidelines and supporting documents to stimulate and support shared and multidisciplinary evidence‐based treatment in diabetes‐related foot disease. In this special virtual issue of Diabetes/Metabolism Research and Reviews, all 21 documents of the 2023 update of the IWGDF Guidelines are bundled, added with a further 6 reviews from multidisciplinary experts to drive future research and clinical innovations, based on their contributions to the International Symposium on the Diabetic Foot. We hope the readers will enjoy this special virtual issue, and widely implement the knowledge shared here in their daily clinical practice and research endeavours with the goal to improve the care for people with diabetes‐related foot disease.

Publisher

Wiley

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