Diabetes-related foot disease is a leading cause of morbidity, mortality and healthcare cost burdens in Australia. Studies show these burdens can be considerably reduced when implementing guideline-based DFD care.
We have developed and released new Australian DFD Guidelines for the first time in a decade, giving health professionals multidisciplinary best practice standards of care for the provision of DFD care within Australia with the PDF paper versions of the guidelines available to download below.
The Australian DFD Guidelines are available on a digital and interactive platform. A free one-stop-shop for accessing the full six guidelines that also provides ten digital decision-making pathways to assist busy health professionals to easily access online and interactive evidence-based guideline information at a touch or click of a button!
You can also access the paper guidelines by clicking on the below link to the full Guideline webpage.
The Diabetes and Feet companion toolkit has been designed to help busy multidisciplinary health professionals use guideline recommended diabetes-related foot care at any time and place and with the person with a diabetes-related foot ulcer right there in front of them. This resource was funded by the National Diabetes Services Scheme (NDSS), an initiative of the Australian Government and administered by Diabetes Australia, in partnership with Diabetes Feet Australia and the Australian Diabetes Society.
The Diabetes and Feet toolkit includes:
• an overview of each guideline from the 2021 Australian guidelines for diabetes-related foot disease
• recommendations for each guideline
• implementation and monitoring considerations
• considerations for the Australian context
• practical pathways for each guideline to help optimise the implementation of the recommendations.
This valuable resource provides health professionals with both quick and easy to access to evidence-based best practice and when further information is required, the digital platform or PDF paper guidelines can be utilised.
Here at Diabetes Feet Australia, we're committed to improving the foot health outcomes for people living with diabetes and in turn help reduce the large health burdens caused by diabetes-related foot disease on the nation, and we're excited to launch the new Australian strategy for foot health and disease in diabetes 2030.
To officially launch the Australian strategy for foot health and disease in diabetes 2030, we've developed an insightful webinar where we chat with some of the authors about why we need a new DFD strategy and discuss how and why the nine key national priority goals can help improve the foot health of people living with diabetes.
So kick back and click play to learn all about the new national strategy and how we can work collaboratively to reduce the burden of diabetes-related foot disease, improve patient outcomes, and advocate for equitable access to care across Australia.
We'd like to thank URGO Medical for their support as our official webinar partner for the release of this important national strategy click to LEARN MORE.