Meta anaLysis of the effect of continuing nursing intervention on high risk patients with diabetic foot / 中国实用护理杂志
Chinese Journal of Practical Nursing
; (36): 794-801, 2019.
Article
in Zh
| WPRIM
| ID: wpr-752530
Responsible library:
WPRO
ABSTRACT
Objective To evaluate the effect of continuous care on patients with high risk of diabetic foot in China. Methods A random control of continuing care for patients with diabetes foot at high risk before June 2018 was published in the full text of the Chinese VP full text database (VIP), the full text database (CNKI), the Chinese biomedical literature database (CBM), Wan Fang, PubMed, Science Library. The test (randomized clinical trial), by 2 researchers, according to the inclusion and exclusion criteria, the literature quality was evaluated and extracted by the document quality standard of Cochrane cooperation network, and the different subgroups were divided according to the difference of the determination time of each outcome index, and the RevMan5.3 software was used to match the data. The required literature is analyzed by Meta. ResuLts A total of 13 randomized clinical trials were included in the Mate analysis, including 1 450 subjects, 721 in the intervention group and 729 in the control group. The results showed that continuous nursing could effectively reduce the value of fasting blood glucose (combined effect MD=-1.34,95% CI -1.44--1.24, P < 0.01), and effectively reduce the value of glycosylated hemoglobin (combined effect MD=-0.75, 95% CI-1.24--0.27, P=0.002), and reduce the diabetic foot in patients with diabetic foot risk(combined effect RR=0.31, 95% CI 0.24-0.40, P<0.01). Continuous care could improve patients′ self-management ability and self-foot nursing ability. ConcLusions Continuous care can reduce the fasting blood glucose, glycosylated hemoglobin and the incidence of diabetic foot in high-risk patients with diabetic foot, improve their self-management ability and self-foot nursing ability, which is of great significance to prevent and reduce the occurrence and development of diabetic foot.
Full text:
1
Database:
WPRIM
Type of study:
Clinical_trials
/
Etiology_studies
/
Systematic_reviews
Language:
Zh
Journal:
Chinese Journal of Practical Nursing
Year:
2019
Document type:
Article