Multidisciplinary Team in Managing Clubfoot: Difference between revisions

No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 3: Line 3:


'''Top Contributors''' - {{Special:Contributors/{{FULLPAGENAME}}}}      
'''Top Contributors''' - {{Special:Contributors/{{FULLPAGENAME}}}}      
</div>
</div><div align="justify">
</div><div align="justify">
== Introduction  ==
== Introduction  ==

Revision as of 19:34, 12 September 2017

Original Editor - Rosalind When in conjunction with Africa Clubfoot Training Team as part of ICRC and GCI Clubfoot Content Development Project

Top Contributors - Naomi O'Reilly, Kim Jackson, Rachael Lowe, Simisola Ajeyalemi, Vidya Acharya, Rucha Gadgil and Meaghan Rieke  

Introduction[edit | edit source]

Successful management of clubfoot requires a multi-disciplinary approach.  It is generally considered to be best practice for children with clubfoot to be treated by a specialist team, with specific training and in a dedicated clubfoot clinic which allows families to interact and expertise to be built up.  Exactly who is included in the team and in what roles depends on which professionals are available locally and how the health system is set up.

Eduardo Salas defines a team as a “distinguishable set of two or more people who interact dynamically, interdependently, and adaptively toward a common and valued goal/objective/mission, who have been each assigned specific roles or functions to perform, and who have a limited life-span of membership.”[1]

Multidisciplinary Team Approach[edit | edit source]

The roles that will generally be required for treatment of a child with clubfoot include:

Manipulation and Casting - Two trained clinicians are required for this portion of the treatment:

  • One to manipulate the foot, hold it in position and mould the plaster
  • One to wrap the plaster onto the foot and leg. 

Tenotomy

An appropriately trained clinician who does the Achilles tendon tenotomy.  In most cases this is an orthopaedic surgeon but in countries where there is a shortage of surgeons this is sometimes carried out by general surgeons or orthopaedic clinical officers.

Follow up and Foot Abduction Bracing (FAB)

Regular follow up is required by a clinician able to monitor the child’s progress, identify signs of relapse, encourage the families to adhere with the FAB protocol and to check and fit the FAB.

Orthopaedic surgeons may or may not be involved on a daily basis in the clubfoot clinic but their involvement is crucial in tenotomy, clinical direction and oversight, and providing any surgical input for older children, relapse or other cases where surgery is needed.

Supplementary roles

In some countries, parent advisors, or counsellors are needed in addition to clinical staff to support families throughout their treatment journey. This is particularly important where families need extra support to adhere with the treatment protocol or where clinic staff are very busy.

Clubfoot is identifiable on ultrasound scan ante-natally.  Where this is available, counselling of families about clubfoot and the treatment process is valuable.

On a national level, where these are not already in place, the roles of the MDT may also include:

o  FAB fabrication

o  Identification of cases and awareness raising

o  Orthotics provision

o  Supply chain management

o  Community support and follow up

Role and Responsibilities of Physiotherapist in Multidisciplinary Team[edit | edit source]

The exact roles of physiotherapists within the MDT vary from location to location. In some countries, clinical services (manipulation and casting, follow up, foot abduction bracing and parent advice) are led by physiotherapists with clinical oversight and provision of tenotomies by orthopaedic surgeons. 

In other countries the corrective phase of treatment is led and applied primarily by surgeons with support from physiotherapists for Foot Abduction Bracing and working with families. 

In all locations physiotherapists have a very important role in working with and supporting families throughout treatment. 

Some patients will require a physiotherapy programme of muscle strengthening or stretching alongside or after completing Ponseti treatment. Patients with clubfoot that do undergo surgery benefit from physiotherapy for rehabilitation.

As well as the above, physiotherapists’ roles may also include collection and evaluation of clinical data, clinic oversight and management and treatment quality assessment and assurance.  For those patients presenting with other conditions (many of which are not identified at birth), physiotherapists may be the first to notice these and to develop a management plan for them.

Globally, physiotherapists from around the world have played an important role in raising awareness of clubfoot, advocating for children with clubfoot and training other clinicians in clubfoot management.

Roles and Responsibilities of other Team Members[edit | edit source]

References[edit | edit source]

References will automatically be added here, see adding references tutorial.

  1. Salas E et al. Toward an understanding of team performance and training. In: Sweeney RW, Salas E, eds. Teams: their training and performance. Norwood, NJ, Ablex, 1992.