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Footwear characteristics and foot problems in community dwelling people with stroke: a cross-sectional observational study

Footwear characteristics and foot problems in community dwelling people with stroke: a cross-sectional observational study
Footwear characteristics and foot problems in community dwelling people with stroke: a cross-sectional observational study

Purpose: To explore footwear characteristics and foot problems in community dwelling people with stroke as most research to date focused on the general elderly population. Methods: Thirty people with mild to moderate stroke (nine men, mean age 68, mean time since onset 67 months) attended a single session to assess footwear and foot problems using established podiatry foot (wear) and ankle assessments. Results: Most participants wore slippers indoors (n = 17, 57%) and walking shoes outdoors (n = 11, 37%). Over half wore unsupportive ill-fitting shoes indoors and 47% of outdoor shoes fitted badly. All participants had foot problems (mean 6.5 (3.1), 95% CI: 5.4–7.7), including impaired single limb heel raise (93%), reduced range of movement (77%), sensation (47%), and muscle strength (43%). Many had foot-pain, hallux valgus (both 50%), or swollen feet (40%). Foot problems were associated with reduced balance confidence, activity, and community participation (all p < 0.05). A greater proportion of fallers (13/16) than non-fallers (4/14) reported foot problems (p = 0.029). Conclusions: Many community-dwelling people with stroke wore poorly fitting shoes; all had foot problems. Foot problems were linked to reduced mobility. Finding more effective pathways to support people with stroke to select supportive, well-fitting indoor and outdoor footwear is indicated.Implications for rehabilitation People with stroke often wear unsupportive ill-fitting shoes and experience foot problems. Assessment of foot problems and footwear advice should be considered during stroke rehabilitation particularly when interventions target fall prevention or improvements in balance and mobility. Information on appropriate footwear and signposting that new shoe purchases should include measuring feet to ensure a good fit is recommended.

Indoor and outdoor shoes, foot problems, footwear, poorly fitting shoes, stroke
0963-8288
Kunkel, Dorit
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Mamode, Louis
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Burnett, Malcolm
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Pickering, Ruth
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Bader, Dan
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Donovan-hall, Margaret
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Cole, Mark
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Ashburn, Ann
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Bowen, Catherine
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Kunkel, Dorit
6b6c65d5-1d03-4a13-9db8-1342cd43f352
Mamode, Louis
d41bea31-68c4-4f39-84cb-20fe93cc35a8
Burnett, Malcolm
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Pickering, Ruth
4a828314-7ddf-4f96-abed-3407017d4c90
Bader, Dan
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Donovan-hall, Margaret
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Cole, Mark
bae4b5d4-9213-4fe7-814c-ea7f17594349
Ashburn, Ann
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Bowen, Catherine
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Kunkel, Dorit, Mamode, Louis, Burnett, Malcolm, Pickering, Ruth, Bader, Dan, Donovan-hall, Margaret, Cole, Mark, Ashburn, Ann and Bowen, Catherine (2022) Footwear characteristics and foot problems in community dwelling people with stroke: a cross-sectional observational study. Disability and Rehabilitation. (doi:10.1080/09638288.2022.2102679).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Purpose: To explore footwear characteristics and foot problems in community dwelling people with stroke as most research to date focused on the general elderly population. Methods: Thirty people with mild to moderate stroke (nine men, mean age 68, mean time since onset 67 months) attended a single session to assess footwear and foot problems using established podiatry foot (wear) and ankle assessments. Results: Most participants wore slippers indoors (n = 17, 57%) and walking shoes outdoors (n = 11, 37%). Over half wore unsupportive ill-fitting shoes indoors and 47% of outdoor shoes fitted badly. All participants had foot problems (mean 6.5 (3.1), 95% CI: 5.4–7.7), including impaired single limb heel raise (93%), reduced range of movement (77%), sensation (47%), and muscle strength (43%). Many had foot-pain, hallux valgus (both 50%), or swollen feet (40%). Foot problems were associated with reduced balance confidence, activity, and community participation (all p < 0.05). A greater proportion of fallers (13/16) than non-fallers (4/14) reported foot problems (p = 0.029). Conclusions: Many community-dwelling people with stroke wore poorly fitting shoes; all had foot problems. Foot problems were linked to reduced mobility. Finding more effective pathways to support people with stroke to select supportive, well-fitting indoor and outdoor footwear is indicated.Implications for rehabilitation People with stroke often wear unsupportive ill-fitting shoes and experience foot problems. Assessment of foot problems and footwear advice should be considered during stroke rehabilitation particularly when interventions target fall prevention or improvements in balance and mobility. Information on appropriate footwear and signposting that new shoe purchases should include measuring feet to ensure a good fit is recommended.

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Footwear characteristics and foot problems in community dwelling people with stroke a cross sectional observational study - Version of Record
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1 Footwear characteristics and foot problems ... manuscript
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2 Footwear characteristics and foot problems ... Table 1 Stroke participant characteristics
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3 Footwear characteristics and foot problems ... Table 2 Footwear characteristics
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4 Footwear characteristics and foot problems ... Table 3 Foot problems identified by the podiatrist using the IMFAA
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5 Footwear characteristics and foot problems ... a) SIS Upper limb movement
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6 Footwear characteristics and foot problems ... b)SIS Activity
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7 Footwear characteristics and foot problems ... c) Balance confidence
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8 Footwear characteristics and foot problems ... d) SIS Participation
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Accepted/In Press date: 10 July 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 14 August 2022
Additional Information: Funding Information: This project was part of a larger study exploring footwear and foot problems in relation to balance and falls in people with stroke and Parkinson disease (NIHR PB-PG-0212-27001). The larger study was split into four study components (a self-report survey [], a podiatric foot (wear) assessment, an experimental movement analysis component exploring balance performance in indoor and outdoor shoes and a qualitative study component exploring the views and experiences of in relation to footwear choices []). This focus of this paper is reporting findings of the podiatric footwear assessment component. Ethical approval was granted (LREC: 14/SW/0078) and the study was sponsored by University Hospitals Southampton NHS Foundation Trust (R&D: RHM MED 1169). STROBE guidelines were considered during study conception, data analysis, and preparation of this manuscript []. Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
Keywords: Indoor and outdoor shoes, foot problems, footwear, poorly fitting shoes, stroke

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 469677
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/469677
ISSN: 0963-8288
PURE UUID: 9b0a65da-5b87-4b18-ac52-9220b55536ad
ORCID for Dorit Kunkel: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4449-1414
ORCID for Malcolm Burnett: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5481-4398
ORCID for Catherine Bowen: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7252-9515

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Date deposited: 22 Sep 2022 16:32
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:56

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Contributors

Author: Dorit Kunkel ORCID iD
Author: Louis Mamode
Author: Malcolm Burnett ORCID iD
Author: Ruth Pickering
Author: Dan Bader
Author: Margaret Donovan-hall
Author: Mark Cole
Author: Ann Ashburn
Author: Catherine Bowen ORCID iD

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