BOFAS News & Events

This pages lists all the latest news and upcoming events.

 

To access 'Foot Print' (the BOFAS Bulletin) please click here (members only)

 

Latest News

Togay Koç
/ Categories: Abstracts, 2015, Poster

A comparison of postoperative footwear following forefoot surgery. A randomised control trial

K. Robinson, F. Harrold, A. Fox, C. Chadwick, C. Blundell, M. Davies

Introduction: Following forefoot surgery patients are put into an accommodative shoe for 6 weeks. Although there are various postoperative shoes available, no studies have compared these shoe for patient satisfaction, effectiveness of pain relief or relative cost. This study looks at three types of footwear, testing the null hypothesis that there is no difference in patient satisfaction or performance between post-operative shoes.

Method: NREC permission was granted for this Prospective Randomised Control Trial (12/yh/0110). Eligible patients (aged over 18, undergoing straightforward 1st ray surgery and independently mobile) were recruited from clinic by senior authors. Thirty of each footwear type (Procare Med/Surg Shoe, Darco shoe, Podalux shoe) were randomly allocated to 90 envelopes. Patients completed a pre-operative MOXFQ and were allocated a study number. Post surgery, each patient was randomly allocated one of the envelopes and fitted with the respective shoe prior to discharge. Patients were seen 6 weeks post-operatively and completed a post-operative MOXFQ and Surgical Shoe Questionnaire. Statistical analysis was carried out with a significance level set at p< 0.05.

Results: There was no significant difference between postoperative means, for the MOXFQ walking/standing domain (p = 0.6789), pain (p = 0.5204) or social interaction (p = 0.6740). There was no significant difference between the mean values for each shoe for the Surgical Shoe Questionnaire (p = 0.2980), nor in willingness of patients to wear the shoe again (p = 0.3681).

Conclusion: We accept our null hypothesis that there is no difference in patient satisfaction or performance between post-operative shoes. Patients were found to be equally satisfied with wearing any of the post-operative shoes. Provided that clinical outcome is not affected by wearing any particular shoe, the clinician is free to choose the most cost effective option or the shoe they feel is best suited to their patient.

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BOFAS Hosted Events

BOFAS Principles Course - Dubai

The aim is to give Overseas Trainee Orthopaedic Surgeons a solid grounding in the principles and the decision making in Foot & Ankle Surgery.

There is an emphasis on clinical examination of cases, small group discussions and learning surgical approaches in the cadaver lab.

This is the first course BOFAS is running in UAE and the aim is to expand the Foot and Ankle education and training in the Middle East and Gulf area.

Venue - Le Meridien, Dubai, United Arab Emirates

Documents to download

BOFAS Principles Course Taunton

These courses are aimed at Higher Surgical Trainees / ST3 onwards and are designed to teach the core of Foot and Ankle surgery in an informal and interactive environment. The emphasis is on clinical examination cases, discussion groups and typical day-to-day clinic scenarios. Although not an exam preparation course, content is taught to the standard expected in the FRCS(Tr & Orth) exam; that of a day-one non-specialist orthopaedic consultant. Applications will open on 1st September 2023.

Venue - Taunton (TBC)

 

 

Documents to download


 

BOFAS Affiliated Courses

Other External Events / Courses