Podiatrist: Difference between revisions
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{{short description|Medical professional devoted to the medical treatment of disorders of the foot}} |
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{{About|the podiatric medical profession practitioners|lower limb care|Podiatric Medicine}} |
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{{About|the podiatric medical profession practitioners|lower limb care|Podiatry}} |
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{{distinguish|Pediatrist}} |
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{{Infobox Occupation |
{{Infobox Occupation |
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| name= Podiatrist |
| name= Podiatrist |
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| image= [[File: |
| image = [[File:Dr Kamran Jamshidinia Performing Bunion Surgery.jpg|220px]] |
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| caption= |
| caption = |
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| official_names= |
| official_names = |
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* Podiatrist |
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* Podiatric Physician |
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* |
* Podiatric surgeon |
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* Foot and ankle surgeon |
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* Doctor of podiatric medicine |
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* Podiatric physician |
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| type= [[Specialty (medicine)|Specialty]] |
| type= [[Specialty (medicine)|Specialty]] |
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| activity_sector= [[Medicine]], [[Podiatry| |
| activity_sector = [[Medicine]], [[Podiatry|podiatric medicine]], [[sports medicine]], [[endocrinology]], [[orthopedic surgery]], [[plastic surgery]] [[dermatology]], [[radiology]], [[biomechanics]], [[rheumatology]], [[neurology]] |
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| competencies= |
| competencies = Expertise in medicine, surgical skills, ethics, critical thinking, analytical skills, professionalism, management skills, and communication skills. |
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| formation= |
| formation= |
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*[[Doctor of Podiatric Medicine]] |
*[[Doctor of Podiatric Medicine]] |
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*[[3 Year Residency]] |
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*[[Other Countries with limited/minimal scope of practice:]] |
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*[[Master of Podiatric Medicine]] |
*[[Master of Podiatric Medicine]] |
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*[[Bachelor of Podiatric Medicine]] |
*[[Bachelor of Podiatric Medicine]] |
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*[[Bachelor of Podiatry]] |
*[[Bachelor of Podiatry]] |
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*[[Bachelor of Podiatry (Honours)]] |
*[[Bachelor of Podiatry (Honours)]] |
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| employment_field= [[Hospital]]s, [[Clinic]]s |
| employment_field = [[Hospital]]s, [[Clinic]]s |
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| related_occupation= |
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}} |
}} |
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A '''podiatrist''' |
A '''podiatrist''' ({{IPAc-en|p|oʊ|ˈ|d|aɪ|.|ə|t|r|ɪ|s|t}} {{Respell|poh|DY|ə|trist}}) is a medical professional devoted to the treatment of disorders of the foot, ankle, and related structures of the leg.<ref name="opma">{{cite web|title=Question: What is podiatry?|url=http://www.opma.org/displaycommon.cfm?an=1&subarticlenbr=58|publisher=Ohio Podiatric Medical Association|access-date=2012-06-27|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140102193845/http://www.opma.org/displaycommon.cfm?an=1&subarticlenbr=58|archive-date=2014-01-02|url-status=dead}}</ref> The term originated in North America but has now become the accepted term in the English-speaking world for all practitioners of [[Podiatry|podiatric medicine]]. The word '''chiropodist''' was previously used in the United States, but it is now regarded as antiquated.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2020-05-06 |title=WHAT’S THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A PODIATRIST AND A CHIROPODIST? {{!}} Essex Union Podiatry |url=https://essexunionpodiatry.com/blog/podiatrist-chiropodist-difference |access-date=2023-01-14 |website=essexunionpodiatry.com |language=en}}</ref> |
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In the United States, podiatrists are educated and licensed as Doctors of Podiatric Medicine (DPM).<ref>{{cite web |title=What is Podiatric Surgery? |url=http://www.yourfeetpodiatry.com/pdfs/what_is_Podiatric_Surgery.pdf |publisher=Australasian College of Podiatric Surgeons |access-date=25 August 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120320113236/http://www.yourfeetpodiatry.com/pdfs/what_is_Podiatric_Surgery.pdf |archive-date=20 March 2012 |url-status=dead }}</ref> The preparatory education of most podiatric physicians—similar to the paths of traditional physicians ([[Doctor of Medicine|MD]] or [[Osteopathic medicine in the United States|DO]])—includes four years of undergraduate work, followed by four years in an accredited [[podiatric medical school]], followed by a three- or four-year hospital-based podiatry residency. Optional one- to two-year fellowship in foot and ankle reconstruction, surgical limb salvage, sports medicine, plastic surgery, pediatric foot and ankle surgery, and wound care is also available.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acfas.org/professional-resources/fellowship-resources|title=ACFAS - Fellowship Resources|website=www.acfas.org}}</ref> Podiatric medical residencies and fellowships are accredited by the Council on Podiatric Medical Education (CPME). The overall scope of podiatric practice varies from state to state with a common focus on foot and ankle surgery.<ref>{{Cite web |title=ACFAS - Policy & Advocacy |url=https://www.acfas.org/policy-advocacy/overview |access-date=2023-04-15 |website=www.acfas.org}}</ref> |
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Worldwide, in many countries the term Podiatrist refers to Allied Health professionals who specialize in the treatment of the lower extremity, particularly the foot. Podiatrists in these countries are specialists in the diagnosis and treatment of foot pathology but not through surgical means. In some circumstances these practitioners will further [[specialty (medicine)|specialise]] and, following further training, perform reconstructive [[foot and ankle surgery]]. |
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In many countries, the term ''podiatrist ''refers to [[allied health professional]]s who specialize in the treatment of the lower extremity, particularly the foot. Podiatrists in these countries are specialists in the diagnosis and nonsurgical treatment of foot pathology. In some circumstances, these practitioners will further [[specialty (medicine)|specialise]] and, following further training, perform reconstructive [[foot and ankle surgery]]. In the '''United States''', a '''podiatrist''' or '''podiatric surgeon''' shares the same model of medical education as '''osteopathic physicians (DO)''' and '''doctors of medicine (MD)''' with 4 years of medical school and 3-4 years of surgical residency focusing on the lower extremity. |
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In contrast, American Podiatrists who hold a Doctor of Podiatric Medicine (D.P.M.) complete surgical residencies and thus all practitioners are trained in surgical treatments of the foot and ankle.<ref name="opma" /> Though the title "chiropodist" was previously used in the United States to designate what is now known as a "podiatrist," it is now considered to be an antiquated and etymologically incorrect term. Although podiatrists worldwide do not attend traditional allopathic medical school, in many countries such as the [[United States]], [[United Kingdom]], and [[Australia]] they are granted privileges to perform surgical procedures of the foot and ankle. |
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Medical Group Management Association (MGMA) data shows that a general podiatrist with a single specialty earns a median salary of $230,357, while one with a multi-specialty practice type earns $270,263. However, a podiatric surgeon is reported to earn with a single specialty, with the median at $304,474 compared to that of multi-specialty podiatric surgeons of $286,201.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.physiciansthrive.com/physician-compensation/podiatrist-salary/#:~:text=Medical%20Group%20Management%20Association%20(MGMA,multispecialty%20practice%20type%20earns%20%24270%2C263. |title=Quick Facts: Podiatrists |work=compensation |publisher= MGMA}}</ref> First-year salaries around $150,000 with performance and productivity incentives are common if working as an associate. Private practice revenues for solo podiatrists vary widely, with the majority of solo practices grossing between $200,000 and $600,000 before overhead.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.salary.com/research/salary/benchmark/physician-podiatry-salary | title=Physician - Podiatry Salary }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.kent.edu/cpm/about-the-profession | title=Medical Specialty: Podiatric Medicine | Kent State University }}</ref> |
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==Podiatric Specialties== |
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==Podiatric specialties== |
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Podiatrists treat a wide variety of foot and lower extremity conditions, through nonsurgical and surgical approaches. The American Board of Podiatric Orthopedics and Primary Podiatric Medicine (ABPOPPM) offers a comprehensive board qualification and certification process in podiatric medicine and orthopedics. Podiatric Medicine and Orthopedics is the medical specialty concerned with the comprehensive and continuous foot health care of patients. There are those podiatric physicians who also specialize (i.e. specialists) in such fields of practice of podiatric medical specialties as: |
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Podiatrists treat a wide variety of foot and lower extremity conditions through nonsurgical and surgical approaches. The [[American Board of Podiatric Medicine]] (ABPM) offers a comprehensive [[board certification|board qualification and certification]] process in podiatric medicine and orthopedics. [[Subspecialty|Subspecialties]] of podiatry include: |
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{{div col|colwidth=45em}} |
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* Reconstructive Foot and Ankle [[Surgery]] (Consultant Podiatric Surgeon)<ref>[http://www.acps.edu.au/ The Australasian College of Podiatric Surgeons]</ref> |
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* [[Reconstructive surgery]]<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.acps.edu.au/|title=ACPS_Homepage|website=www.acps.edu.au}}</ref> |
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* General [[Podiatric]] [[Physician]] |
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* General podiatry |
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* [[Podiatric]] [[Medical]] [[Physician]] |
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* |
* Podiatric medicine |
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* Podiatric [[orthopedics]] |
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* [[Sports Medicine]] (Podiatric Sports Physicians) |
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* Podiatric [[sports medicine]] |
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* High Risk Wound Care <ref name=HighRisk /> |
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* Lower extremity [[plastic surgery]] |
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* [[Podiatric]] [[Rheumatology]] <ref>[http://www.aprsig.co.nz/ AUSTRALASIAN PODIATRIC RHEUMATOLOGY SPECIALIST INTEREST GROUP]</ref><ref>[http://www.rheumatology.org.uk/bhpr/clinical/roles_in_rheumatology/podiatrist.aspx British Health Professionals in Rheumatology (BHPR) ]</ref> |
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* High-risk [[History of wound care#Wound-site dressing|wound care]]<ref name=HighRisk /> |
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* Neuro-podiatrist ([[Neurology]]) <ref name=HighRisk>{{cite web|url=http://www.app-hrf.com.au/cms/ |title=Advanced Practicing Podiatrists – High Risk Foot |publisher=App-hrf.com.au |date=2012-10-23 |accessdate=2012-11-08}}</ref> |
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* Podiatric [[rheumatology]]<ref>[http://www.aprsig.co.nz/ AUSTRALASIAN PODIATRIC RHEUMATOLOGY SPECIALIST INTEREST GROUP] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130809063110/http://www.aprsig.co.nz/ |date=2013-08-09 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.rheumatology.org.uk/bhpr/clinical/roles_in_rheumatology/podiatrist.aspx |title=British Health Professionals in Rheumatology (BHPR) |access-date=2012-12-30 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161220234201/http://www.rheumatology.org.uk/bhpr/clinical/roles_in_rheumatology/podiatrist.aspx |archive-date=2016-12-20 |url-status=dead }}</ref> |
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* Onco-podiatrist (Skin Cancers) or [[Podiatric]] [[Oncologist]] |
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* [[Neurology|Neuropodiatry]]<ref name=HighRisk>{{cite web |url=http://www.app-hrf.com.au/cms/ |title=Advanced Practicing Podiatrists – High Risk Foot |publisher=App-hrf.com.au |date=2012-10-23 |access-date=2012-11-08 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130419021151/http://www.app-hrf.com.au/cms/ |archive-date=2013-04-19 |url-status=dead }}</ref> |
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* [[Podiatric]] [[Vascular]] [[medical specialty|Specialist]] |
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* [[Skin cancer|Oncopodiatry]] (podiatric [[oncology]]) |
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* [[Dermatological]] Podiatrist |
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* Podiatric [[vascular surgery|vascular]] medicine |
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* Diagnostic Podoradiologist ([[Radiology]]) |
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* Podiatric [[dermatology]] |
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* [[Gerentological]] Podiatrist |
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* [[Diagnostic radiology|Podoradiology]] |
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* Diabetic limb salvage and wound care (Podiatric Diabetologist) <ref name="HighRisk"/> |
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* Podiatric [[gerontology]] |
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* [[Podopaediatrics]] (the study of children's foot and ankle conditions) <ref>[http://www.gcu.ac.uk/study/postgraduate/courses/health-and-social-care-podopaediatrics-pt-8678.php?loc=uk Health & Social Care (Podopaediatrics) PT]</ref> |
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* Podiatric [[diabetes|diabetology]] (limb salvage and wound care)<ref name="HighRisk"/> |
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* [[Forensic Podiatry]] (the study of footprints, footwear, shoeprints and feet associated with crime scene investigations) |
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* [[Pediatrics|Podopediatrics]]<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.gcu.ac.uk/study/postgraduate/courses/health-and-social-care-podopaediatrics-pt-8678.php?loc=uk|title=Health & Social Care (Podopaediatrics) PT}}</ref> |
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* [[Forensic podiatry]] |
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{{Div col end}} |
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==Podiatry assistant== |
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In Australia there is now an option to be a podiatric assistant. The qualification is a Certificate IV in Allied Health Assistance specialising in podiatry.<ref>[http://www.healthindustrytraining.org/certificates/HLT42507-Certificate-IV-Allied-Health-Assistance.html Certificate IV in Allied Health Assistance - HLT42507]</ref> They work as a part of a podiatric medical team in a variety of clinical and non clinical settings. There is currently developing strategies further utilise these skilled workers. Worldwide there are common professional accrediation pathways to be a podiatric assistant. There are many fields such as: |
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In Australia, podiatry assistant Certificate IV in Allied Health Assistance qualification.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://healthindustrytraining.org/courses/certificate-iv-allied-health-assistance/|title=Allied Health Courses | Certificate IV in Allied Health Assistance | Cert IV}}</ref> The podiatry assistant work as a part of a podiatric medical team in both clinical and nonclinical settings. Common professional accreditation pathways to becoming a podiatric assistant include: |
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* [[Podiatric]] [[Nurse]] |
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{{div col|colwidth=45em}} |
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* Podiatric [[nurse]] |
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* Foot carer/nurse |
* Foot carer/nurse |
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* Podiatry support worker |
* Podiatry support worker |
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* Podiatry technician |
* Podiatry technician |
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* Podiatry |
* Podiatry hygienist |
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* |
* Foot health professional |
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* Podiatric |
* Podiatric [[surgical nurse]] |
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* Foot |
* Foot hygienist |
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* [[Foot |
* [[Foot health practitioner]] |
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* Podiatric |
* Podiatric [[medical assistant]] |
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{{Div col end}} |
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==Podiatric surgery== |
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Podiatric surgery is concerned with the diagnosis and surgical treatment of disorders of the foot and ankle: |
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{{div col|colwidth=45em}} |
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Podiatric surgery is a specialist field in the podiatry profession in most western countries, including Australia, the United States and the United Kingdom. Podiatric surgery is defined as “the surgical treatment of conditions affecting the foot, ankle and related lower extremity structures by accredited and qualified specialist podiatrists”. Podiatric surgeons are concerned with the diagnosis and treatment of disorders of the foot and ankle. Podiatric surgeons are qualified to care for bone, joint, ligament, muscle and tendon pathology of the foot and ankle, such as: |
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* Structural deformities, including [[bunion]]s, [[hammertoe]]s, [[flat feet]], [[high arches]], and [[bone spur]]s |
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* Structural deformities, including bunions, hammertoes, painful flat foot and high arch deformity, bone spurs |
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* Heel pain |
* Heel pain |
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* Nerve |
* [[Nerve entrapment]] |
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* |
* Joint degeneration and [[arthrosis]] |
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* Skin and nail conditions |
* Skin and nail conditions |
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* Congenital deformities |
* Congenital deformities such as [[clubfoot]] and [[polydactyly]] |
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* Trauma |
* Trauma, including [[bone fracture|fracture]]s and [[joint dislocation|dislocation]]s |
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* Ankle fractures |
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* Deformity correction/reconstruction for things like [[malunion]], limb length discrepancy, Charcot neuroarthropathy |
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* Joint fusions for [[arthritis]] and other painful joint destructive conditions in the foot and ankle |
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* Total ankle replacements |
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* Total or hemi-joint replacements |
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{{div col end}} |
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==Responsibilities== |
==Responsibilities== |
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Podiatrists' roles include dealing with the conditions resulting from bone and joint disorders such as arthritis and soft-tissue and muscular pathologies as well as neurological and circulatory diseases. |
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Podiatrists are also able to diagnose and treat any complications of the above which affect the lower limb, including skin and nail disorders, corns, calluses and ingrown toenails. Foot injuries and infections gained through sport or other activities are also diagnosed and treated by podiatrists.<ref>[http://www.podiatryvic.com.au/Podiatrists/Podiatry.htm About Podiatrists]. Retrieved on 2012-07-06.</ref> |
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Podiatrists scope of practice within Australia allows them to; |
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==Education and Training== |
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- Refer for a range of diagnostic imaging: x-ray, ultrasound, MRI etc. |
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===Australia=== |
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- Assess a range of special patient groups including, paediatric patients, older patients, high-risk patients, sporting patients. |
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Australian podiatrists complete an undergraduate degree ranging from 3 to 4 years of education. The first 2 years of this program are generally focused on various biomedical science subjects including anatomy, medical chemistry, biochemistry, physiology, pathophysiology, sociology and patient psychology, similar to the medical curriculum. The following two years will then be spent focusing on podiatry specific areas such as podiatric biomechanics and human gait, podiatric orthopaedics or the non-surgical management of foot abnormalities, pharmacology, general medicine, general pathology, local and general anaesthesia, and surgical procedural techniques such as [[Surgical treatment of ingrown toe nails|partial]] and [[Surgical treatment of ingrown toe nails|total nail avulsions]], matricectomy, [[cryotherapy]], wound debridement and care, [[enucleation (surgery)|enucleation]], and other cutaneous and electro-surgical procedures such as electro-desiccation, fulagaration and electrosection. Podiatric surgeons are [[specialist]] podiatrists who have completed extensive, post graduate medical and surgical training and perform reconstructive surgery of the foot and ankle. The qualifications of podiatric surgeons are recognised by Australian State and Federal Governments. It is an approved specialty by the Australian Health Practitioners Regulation Agency. Podiatric surgeons are included within both the Health Insurance Act and the National Health Act. |
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- Assess and treat a wide range of <u>musculoskeletal injuries</u>, including, '''fractures''' ''(acute & bone stress injuries)'', '''tendon pathologies''' ''(Achilles tendiopathy, posterior tibial tendon dysfunction, tibalis posterior tendonitis etc),'' '''plantar heel pain''' ''(plantar fasciopathy/fasciitis)'', '''ankle sprains''', '''chronic ankle instability''', foot/ankle/knee '''arthritis''', '''medial tibial stress syndroms''' ''(MTSS / "shin splints").'' |
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The Podiatry Board of Australia recognizes 3 pathways to attain specialist registration as a Podiatric Surgeon:<ref>[http://www.podiatryboard.gov.au/Registration-Endorsement/Specialist-Registration.aspx Process for Application for Specialist Registration of Podiatric Surgeons]. podiatryboard.gov.au. Retrieved on 2012-06-27.</ref> |
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*1. Fellowship of the Australasian College of Podiatric Surgeons |
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*2. Doctor of Clinical Podiatry, University of Western Australia |
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*3. Eligibility for Fellowship of the Australasian College of Podiatric Surgeons |
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- Utilise a range of therapeutic modalities including, exercise prescription, electrotherapies ''(shockwave, TENS, laser therapy, ultrasound)'', orthoses, footwear prescriptions, pharmacological prescriptions ''(for endorsed prescribers).'' |
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Podiatric surgical qualifications are a post-graduate speciality of the podiatric |
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profession. Before attaining a podiatric surgical fellowship qualification, a podiatrist |
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- Perform partial nail avulsion surgeries (to treat ingrown toenails). |
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must complete an extensive training program, including: |
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1. Bachelor of Applied Science degree, majoring in Podiatry (4 years) |
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- Inject local anaesthetics. |
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2. Minimum of 2 years post-graduate clinical practice |
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3. Master of Podiatry (2 years full-time university degree) |
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- Perform routine & general nail care treatments. |
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4. A 3-stage surgical fellowship training under supervision of the ACPS (4 to 6 years) |
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5. International residency training (usually in the UK and USA) |
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- Assess & manage pediatric pathologies. |
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6. Demonstrated mastery of knowledge in foot and ankle surgery by passing oral and |
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written examinations administered by the ACPS |
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- Assess & manage high-risk patient groups in both private and hospital settings, including; perform neurovascular assessments, diabetic wound care. |
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==Education and training== |
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===United States=== |
===United States=== |
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In the United States, medical and surgical care of the foot and ankle is mainly provided by two groups of |
In the United States, medical and surgical care of the foot and ankle is mainly provided by two groups of professionals: podiatrists (Doctor of Podiatric Medicine or DPM) and orthopedists (MDs or DOs). |
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The first |
The first two years of podiatric medical school is similar to training that either [[Doctor of Medicine|Doctors of Medicine]] (M.D.) or [[Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine|Doctors of Osteopathic Medicine]] (D.O.) receive, but with an emphasized scope on foot, ankle, and lower extremity. To enter a college of podiatric medicine, the student must first complete at least three years or 90 semester hours of college credit at an accredited institution. Biology, chemistry, organic chemistry, physics (all science courses require a lab) and English are among the required subjects. Over 95% of the students who enter a college of podiatric medicine have a bachelor's degree. Many have also completed some graduate study. Before entering a college of podiatric medicine, the student must take the [[MCAT]] (Medical College Admissions Test).<ref>{{cite web |url=http://wvpma.org/what-is-podiatric-medicine.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=2014-02-03 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140203133107/http://wvpma.org/what-is-podiatric-medicine.html|title=Training of a Podiatrist |website=West Virginia Podiatric Medical Association (WVPMA) |access-date= 2012-06-27}}</ref> In 2019, the average MCAT score for matriculants was 499.6 and the average undergraduate cGPA was 3.3.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Applicants' MCAT averages by year |url=https://aacpm.org/wp-content/uploads/Applicant-MCAT-Average-2017-2021.pdf}}</ref> |
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There are 11 colleges of podiatric medicine in the United States.<ref>{{cite web |title=The American Association of Colleges of Podiatric Medicine |url=https://aacpm.org/ |access-date=2023-10-09 |website=The American Association of Colleges of Podiatric Medicine (AACPM)}}</ref> They all receive accreditation from the Council on Podiatric Medical Education, which is recognized by the U.S. Secretary of Education and the Council on Higher Education Accreditation. All of the colleges grant the degree of Doctor of Podiatric Medicine (DPM).<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.mpma.org/resources/podiatry-career |title=Podiatric Medicine as a Career |url-status=dead |archive-date=2013-10-20 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131020165156/http://mpma.org/resources/podiatry-career |website=Michigan Podiatric Medical Association (MPMA) |access-date=2012-06-27}}</ref> |
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The four-year podiatric medical school is followed by a hospital based residency, which is hands-on post-doctoral training. Their residency model was standardized to 3-years of post-graduate training in 2011 (with some programs lasting 4 years in length), and the residency is now known as the Podiatric Medicine and Surgery Residency (PMSR) with almost all now having an added Reconstructive Rearfoot and Ankle (RRA) credential. Podiatric residents rotate through core areas of medicine and surgery. They work alongside their MD and DO counterparts in such rotations as emergency medicine, internal medicine, infectious disease, behavioral medicine, physical medicine and rehabilitation (PM&R), vascular surgery, general surgery, orthopedic surgery, plastic surgery, dermatology and podiatric surgery and medicine. Fellowship training is available after residency in such fields such as foot and ankle traumatology, lower extremity reconstruction, or limb salvage. |
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There are nine colleges of podiatric medicine in the United States<ref>[http://www.aacpm.org/Retrieved on 2012-06-27.]</ref> |
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. They all receive accreditation from the Council on Podiatric Medical Education, which is recognized by the U.S. Secretary of Education and the Council on Higher Education Accreditation. All of the colleges grant the degree of Doctor of Podiatric Medicine (DPM).<ref>[http://www.mpma.org/resources/podiatry-career PODIATRIC MEDICINE AS A CAREER]. mpma.org. Retrieved on 2012-06-27.</ref> |
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Upon completion of their residency, podiatrists can decide to become board certified by a number of specialty boards including the [http://www.podiatryboard.org American Board of Podiatric Medicine (ABPM)] and/or the [[Www.abfas.org|American Board of Foot and Ankle Surgery]] (ABFAS), which are both approved by the profession's accrediting agency, the CPME, and both have been certifying podiatrists since the 1970s. Though the ABPM and ABFAS are more common, other boards not recognized by CPME are challenging the ''status quo'' confer board qualified/certified status. The American Board of Multiple Specialties in Podiatry (ABMSP) is one additional option and has been certifying podiatrists since 1998.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://abmsp.org/|title=ABMSP|website=ABMSP}}</ref> |
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The four-year podiatric medical school is followed by a surgical based residency, which is hands-on post-doctoral training. There are two standard residencies: Podiatric Medicine & Surgery 24 and Podiatric Medicine & Surgery 36 (PM&S 24 or PM&S 36). These represent the two- or three-year residency training. By July 2013, all residency programs in podiatry will be required to transition to a minimum three-years of post-doctoral training.[18] Podiatric residents rotate through core areas of medicine and surgery. They work along side their MD and DO counterparts in such rotations as emergency medicine, internal medicine, infectious disease, behavioral medicine, physical medicine & rehabilitation, vascular surgery, general surgery, orthopedic surgery, plastic surgery, dermatology and of course podiatric surgery and medicine. Fellowship training is available after residency in such fields such as foot & ankle traumatology or limb salvage. |
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The DPM superseded the historical DSC (Doctor of Surgical Chiropody) degree in the 1960s. |
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Upon completion of their residency, podiatrists can decide to become board certified by a number of specialty boards including the more common American Board of Podiatric Orthopedics and Primary Podiatric Medicine and/or the American Board of Podiatric Surgery. The ABPMS or The American Board of Podiatric Medical Specialties has been certifying podiatrists since 1998. Within the American Board of Podiatric Surgery, PM&S 24 graduates can sit for Board Certification in Foot Surgery and those that complete PM&S 36 can sit for Board Certification in Foot Surgery and Board Certification in Reconstructive Rearfoot & Ankle Surgery. Both boards in ABPS are examined as separate tracks. Though the ABPS and ABPOPPM are more common, other boards are equally challenging and confer board qualified/certified status. Many hospitals and insurance plans do not require board eligibility or certification to participate. |
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=== |
===Australia=== |
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Australian podiatrists complete an undergraduate degree of Bachelor of Podiatry or [[Bachelor of Podiatric Medicine]] ranging from 3 to 4 years of education. |
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The first 2 years of this program are generally focused on various biomedical science subjects including anatomy, medical chemistry, biochemistry, physiology, pathophysiology, sociology and patient psychology, similar to the medical curriculum and that of other allied health disciplines. |
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The following two years will then be spent focusing on podiatry specific areas such as podiatric biomechanics and human gait, podiatric orthopaedics or the non-surgical management of foot abnormalities, [[pharmacology]] and prescribing, general medicine, general pathology, local and general anaesthesia, and surgical procedural techniques such as partial and total [[Surgical treatment of ingrown toe nails|nail avulsions]], matricectomy, [[cryotherapy]], wound debridement and care, [[enucleation (surgery)|enucleation]], and other cutaneous and electro-surgical procedures such as electro-desiccation, fulagaration and electrosection. |
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In the UK, podiatrists usually undertake a 3 year undergraduate Bachelor of Science (Podiatry). Podiatric Surgeons have undertaken fellowships and postgraduate training. The scope of practice of a podiatrist falls into four key categories: General clinics, Biomechanics, High risk patient management and Surgery. There are two levels of surgical practice. As part of general podiatric care, podiatrists as HPC (Health Professions Council) registered practitioners are involved with nail and minor soft tissue surgical procedures and qualified to administer local anaesthetics. From 1 August 2012, the HPC is being rebranded to the HCPC (Health & Care Professions Council) as they are expanding their remit to include Social Workers.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hpc-uk.org/mediaandevents/pressreleases/hpctobecomehcpcon1august2012/ |title=HCPC - Health and Care Professions Council - New name for the Health Professions Council |publisher=Hpc-uk.org |date= |accessdate=2012-08-25}}</ref> The old term of "State Registered" has been defunct for some time and is no longer used since the creation of the HPC. Some podiatrists go on to develop and train as podiatric surgeons, who surgically manage bone and joint disorders within the foot. It is to this latter group (Podiatric Surgeons) that the guidelines apply. Fellowship requires a minimum of six years postgraduate training. This includes a two or three year surgical residency with an approved centre. Podiatric surgeons acquire comprehensive knowledge of related subjects including pharmacology, regional anaesthetic techniques and radiographic interpretation, as well as in-depth knowledge of foot surgery. The surgical faculty of the College of Podiatrists has set the standards for fellowship. |
|||
During the initial two years of study, podiatry students begin clinical placements, practicals and skills labs which give them exposure to a wide range of patients and treatment modalities. |
|||
For example; diabetic foot assessments, gait & biomechanical assessments, orthoses manufacture, clinical history taking, diagnostic imaging and general podiatry care. |
|||
Other topics studied in the final years of the degree include, podiatric sports medicine, exercise prescription & rehabilitation, advanced wound care and paediatric podiatry (paediatric gait, growth & developmental disorders). |
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Postgraduate courses in podiatric therapeutics and prescribing are required for having endorsements in scheduled medicines. |
|||
The Australian Podiatry Association supports Career Framework credentials, that recognise advanced competencies and clinical skills of podiatrists in Australia. |
|||
The purpose is to provide an enhanced career progression beyond initial training that is both clear and transparent to consumers and the profession. |
|||
In awarding the credential, the APodA can verify podiatrists have demonstrated and provided evidence of competency in their clinical interest area and undergone a rigorous assessment process. |
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The APodA currently awards credentials in two clinical interest areas: |
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- Paediatrics |
|||
- Sports/Biomechanics |
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The curriculum and assessment of The APodA Career Framework has been structured around the CanMEDS framework. CanMEDS is a universally recognised and adopted physician competency framework. A credentialled podiatrist will therefore personify and seamlessly integrate the competencies of all seven CanMEDS Roles: |
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# Medical Expert |
|||
# Communicator |
|||
# Collaborator |
|||
# Leader |
|||
# Health Advocate |
|||
# Scholar |
|||
# Professional |
|||
Only current APodA members are eligible to promote their credentialling. That is, the title is only available to be used by active members of the Australian Podiatry Association. |
|||
All podiatrists are required to register with [[Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency]] (AHPRA) prior to be licensed to practice in Australia. |
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Registration is required annually and there is a minimum registration standard that includes; |
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- Completing 20 hours of continuing professional development (CPD) hours (additional hours are required for podiatric surgeons and podiatrists who are endorsed to prescribe scheduled medicines). |
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- Having current professional indemnity insurance. |
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- Having current CPR, First Aid & Anaphylaxis training. |
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===Podiatric surgery in Australia=== |
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Podiatric surgeons are [[specialty (medicine)|specialist]] podiatrists who have completed extensive, post-graduate medical and surgical training and perform reconstructive surgery of the foot and ankle. The qualifications of podiatric surgeons are recognised by Australian state and federal governments. It is an approved specialty by the AHPRA. Podiatric surgeons are included within both the ''Health Insurance Act'' and the ''National Health Act''. The Podiatry Board of Australia recognizes 3 pathways to attain specialist registration as a Podiatric Surgeon:<ref>[http://www.podiatryboard.gov.au/Registration-Endorsement/Specialist-Registration.aspx Process for Application for Specialist Registration of Podiatric Surgeons]. podiatryboard.gov.au. Retrieved on 2012-06-27.</ref> |
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*Fellowship of the Australasian College of Podiatric Surgeons |
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*Doctor of Podiatric Surgery, University of Western Australia |
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*Eligibility for Fellowship of the Australasian College of Podiatric Surgeons |
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Podiatric surgical qualifications are a post-graduate speciality of the podiatric profession. Before attaining a podiatric surgical fellowship qualification, a podiatrist must complete an extensive training program, including: |
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#Bachelor of Applied Science degree, majoring in Podiatry (4 years) |
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#Minimum of 2 years post-graduate clinical practice |
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#Master of Podiatry (2 years full-time university degree) |
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#A 3-stage surgical fellowship training under supervision of the ACPS (4 to 6 years) |
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#International residency training (usually in the UK and USA) |
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#Demonstrated mastery of knowledge in foot and ankle surgery by passing oral and written examinations administered by the ACPS |
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===New Zealand=== |
===New Zealand=== |
||
Only one university, [[Auckland University of Technology]] (AUT), offers training to become a podiatrist. Podiatrists must have a Bachelor of Health Science majoring in podiatry from AUT, or an overseas qualification recognised by the Podiatrists Board of New Zealand, be registered with the Podiatrists Board of New Zealand and have a current Annual Practising Certificate.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.careers.govt.nz/default.aspx?id0=30103&id1=j35175 |title=Podiatrist: How to get into this job - Careers New Zealand |publisher=Careers.govt.nz |access-date=2012-08-25}}</ref> |
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===Canada=== |
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In Canada, the definition and scope of the practice of podiatry varies provincially. For instance, in some provinces like [[British Columbia]] and [[Alberta]], the standards are the same as in the United States where the Doctor of Podiatric Medicine (DPM) is the accepted qualification. |
|||
[[Quebec]], too, has recently changed to the DPM level of training, although other academic designations may also register. Also in Quebec, in 2004, [[Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières]] started the first program of Podiatric Medicine in Canada based on the American definition of podiatry. In the prairie and Atlantic provinces, the standard was originally based on the British model now called podiatry ([[chiropody]]). That model of podiatry is currently the accepted model for most of the world including the United Kingdom, Australia and South Africa. |
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The province of [[Ontario]] has been registering Chiropodists since July 1993 (when the Ontario Government imposed a cap on new podiatrists). If a registered podiatrist from outside of Ontario relocates to Ontario they are required to register with the province and practice as a chiropodist. Podiatrists who were practising in Ontario previous to the imposed provincial cap were 'grandfathered' and allowed to keep the title of podiatrist as a subclass of chiropody. The scope of these 'grandfathered' (mostly American trained) podiatrists includes boney procedures of the forefoot and the ordering of x-rays in addition to the scope of the chiropodist. |
|||
In Ontario, podiatrists are required to have a "Doctor of Podiatric Medicine/DPM" degree (a post-baccalaureate, four-year degree), where the majority of chiropodists currently practising hold a post-secondary diploma in chiropody, although many also have some university level schooling or a baccalaureate degree in the sciences or in another field. Podiatrists may bill [[OHIP]] for their services; chiropodists may not. Podiatrists may "communicate a diagnosis" to their patients (or to their patients' representatives) and perform surgical procedures on the bones of the forefoot; chiropodists may do neither.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://opma.wildapricot.org/podiatryandchiropody/|title=Ontario Podiatric Medical Association (OPMA) - Podiatry and Chiropody|website=opma.wildapricot.org}}</ref> |
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Chiropodists and podiatrists are regulated by the [http://www.cocoo.on.ca College of Chiropodists of Ontario], which had 594 chiropodists and 65 podiatrists registered as of 29 July 2015.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.cocoo.on.ca/|title=Homepage|website=College of Chiropodists of Ontario}}</ref> |
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The only English-speaking '''Chiropody''' program in Canada, in which also has a working Chiropody Clinic on campus for students to treat patients under the supervision of licensed Chiropodists is [[The Michener Institute]]. According to The Michener Institute website, Chiropody is a branch of medical science that involves the assessment and management of foot and lower limb disorders. This includes the management of a wide variety of disorders, injuries, foot deformities, infections and local manifestations of systemic conditions. A '''Chiropodist''' is a primary care professional practising in podiatric medicine in Ontario that specializes in assessment, management and prevention of diseases and disorders of the foot. An essential member of the inter professional healthcare team, the Chiropodist is skilled in assessing the needs of their patients and of managing both chronic and acute conditions affecting foot and lower limb function. As a primary care provider capable of independent clinical practice, these skills are often practised independent of medical referral and medical supervision. |
|||
===United Kingdom=== |
|||
In the UK, podiatrists usually undertake a 3-year undergraduate Bachelor of Science (Podiatry). Podiatric Surgeons usually undertake fellowships and postgraduate studies. The scope of practice of a podiatrist falls into four key categories: |
|||
* General clinics |
|||
* Biomechanics |
|||
* High-risk patient management |
|||
* Surgery. |
|||
There are two levels of surgical practice. As part of general podiatric care, podiatrists as HPC (Health Professions Council)-registered practitioners are involved with nail-and-minor-soft-tissue surgical procedures and qualified to administer local anaesthetics. |
|||
From 1 August 2012, the HPC is being rebranded to the HCPC (Health & Care Professions Council) as they are expanding their remit to include Social Workers.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hpc-uk.org/mediaandevents/pressreleases/hpctobecomehcpcon1august2012/ |title=HCPC - Health and Care Professions Council - New name for the Health Professions Council |publisher=Hpc-uk.org |access-date=2012-08-25}}</ref> The old term of "State Registered" has been defunct for some time and is no longer used since the creation of the HPC. |
|||
Some podiatrists go on to develop and train as podiatric surgeons, who surgically manage bone and joint disorders within the foot. It is to this latter group (Podiatric Surgeons) that the guidelines apply. Fellowship requires a minimum of six-years postgraduate training. This includes a two- or three-year surgical residency with an approved centre. Podiatric surgeons acquire comprehensive knowledge of related subjects including pharmacology, regional anaesthetic techniques and radiographic interpretation, as well as in-depth knowledge of foot surgery. The Surgical Faculty of the College of Podiatrists has set the standards for fellowship. |
|||
In 2019, a 23% drop in podiatry students in the UK was reported. The [[Conference of Postgraduate Medical Deans]] called for full payment of their tuition fees and the introduction of a maintenance grant for healthcare students.<ref>{{cite news |title=The Ward Round: 200 more male nurses? A drop in the ocean |url=https://www.hsj.co.uk/governance/the-ward-round-200-more-male-nurses-a-drop-in-the-ocean/7024534.article? |access-date=8 April 2019 |publisher=Health Service Journal |date=28 February 2019}}</ref> |
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== References == |
== References == |
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{{Reflist}} |
{{Reflist}} |
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[[Category:Healthcare occupations]] |
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[[Category:Podiatry]] |
[[Category:Podiatry]] |
Latest revision as of 00:53, 6 December 2024
Occupation | |
---|---|
Names |
|
Occupation type | Specialty |
Activity sectors | Medicine, podiatric medicine, sports medicine, endocrinology, orthopedic surgery, plastic surgery dermatology, radiology, biomechanics, rheumatology, neurology |
Description | |
Competencies | Expertise in medicine, surgical skills, ethics, critical thinking, analytical skills, professionalism, management skills, and communication skills. |
Education required | |
Fields of employment | Hospitals, Clinics |
A podiatrist (/poʊˈdaɪ.ətrɪst/ poh-DY-ə-trist) is a medical professional devoted to the treatment of disorders of the foot, ankle, and related structures of the leg.[1] The term originated in North America but has now become the accepted term in the English-speaking world for all practitioners of podiatric medicine. The word chiropodist was previously used in the United States, but it is now regarded as antiquated.[2]
In the United States, podiatrists are educated and licensed as Doctors of Podiatric Medicine (DPM).[3] The preparatory education of most podiatric physicians—similar to the paths of traditional physicians (MD or DO)—includes four years of undergraduate work, followed by four years in an accredited podiatric medical school, followed by a three- or four-year hospital-based podiatry residency. Optional one- to two-year fellowship in foot and ankle reconstruction, surgical limb salvage, sports medicine, plastic surgery, pediatric foot and ankle surgery, and wound care is also available.[4] Podiatric medical residencies and fellowships are accredited by the Council on Podiatric Medical Education (CPME). The overall scope of podiatric practice varies from state to state with a common focus on foot and ankle surgery.[5]
In many countries, the term podiatrist refers to allied health professionals who specialize in the treatment of the lower extremity, particularly the foot. Podiatrists in these countries are specialists in the diagnosis and nonsurgical treatment of foot pathology. In some circumstances, these practitioners will further specialise and, following further training, perform reconstructive foot and ankle surgery. In the United States, a podiatrist or podiatric surgeon shares the same model of medical education as osteopathic physicians (DO) and doctors of medicine (MD) with 4 years of medical school and 3-4 years of surgical residency focusing on the lower extremity.
Medical Group Management Association (MGMA) data shows that a general podiatrist with a single specialty earns a median salary of $230,357, while one with a multi-specialty practice type earns $270,263. However, a podiatric surgeon is reported to earn with a single specialty, with the median at $304,474 compared to that of multi-specialty podiatric surgeons of $286,201.[6] First-year salaries around $150,000 with performance and productivity incentives are common if working as an associate. Private practice revenues for solo podiatrists vary widely, with the majority of solo practices grossing between $200,000 and $600,000 before overhead.[7][8]
Podiatric specialties
[edit]Podiatrists treat a wide variety of foot and lower extremity conditions through nonsurgical and surgical approaches. The American Board of Podiatric Medicine (ABPM) offers a comprehensive board qualification and certification process in podiatric medicine and orthopedics. Subspecialties of podiatry include:
- Reconstructive surgery[9]
- General podiatry
- Podiatric medicine
- Podiatric orthopedics
- Podiatric sports medicine
- Lower extremity plastic surgery
- High-risk wound care[10]
- Podiatric rheumatology[11][12]
- Neuropodiatry[10]
- Oncopodiatry (podiatric oncology)
- Podiatric vascular medicine
- Podiatric dermatology
- Podoradiology
- Podiatric gerontology
- Podiatric diabetology (limb salvage and wound care)[10]
- Podopediatrics[13]
- Forensic podiatry
Podiatry assistant
[edit]In Australia, podiatry assistant Certificate IV in Allied Health Assistance qualification.[14] The podiatry assistant work as a part of a podiatric medical team in both clinical and nonclinical settings. Common professional accreditation pathways to becoming a podiatric assistant include:
- Podiatric nurse
- Foot carer/nurse
- Podiatry support worker
- Podiatry technician
- Podiatry hygienist
- Foot health professional
- Podiatric surgical nurse
- Foot hygienist
- Foot health practitioner
- Podiatric medical assistant
Podiatric surgery
[edit]Podiatric surgery is concerned with the diagnosis and surgical treatment of disorders of the foot and ankle:
- Structural deformities, including bunions, hammertoes, flat feet, high arches, and bone spurs
- Heel pain
- Nerve entrapment
- Joint degeneration and arthrosis
- Skin and nail conditions
- Congenital deformities such as clubfoot and polydactyly
- Trauma, including fractures and dislocations
- Ankle fractures
- Deformity correction/reconstruction for things like malunion, limb length discrepancy, Charcot neuroarthropathy
- Joint fusions for arthritis and other painful joint destructive conditions in the foot and ankle
- Total ankle replacements
- Total or hemi-joint replacements
Responsibilities
[edit]Podiatrists' roles include dealing with the conditions resulting from bone and joint disorders such as arthritis and soft-tissue and muscular pathologies as well as neurological and circulatory diseases.
Podiatrists are also able to diagnose and treat any complications of the above which affect the lower limb, including skin and nail disorders, corns, calluses and ingrown toenails. Foot injuries and infections gained through sport or other activities are also diagnosed and treated by podiatrists.[15]
Podiatrists scope of practice within Australia allows them to;
- Refer for a range of diagnostic imaging: x-ray, ultrasound, MRI etc.
- Assess a range of special patient groups including, paediatric patients, older patients, high-risk patients, sporting patients.
- Assess and treat a wide range of musculoskeletal injuries, including, fractures (acute & bone stress injuries), tendon pathologies (Achilles tendiopathy, posterior tibial tendon dysfunction, tibalis posterior tendonitis etc), plantar heel pain (plantar fasciopathy/fasciitis), ankle sprains, chronic ankle instability, foot/ankle/knee arthritis, medial tibial stress syndroms (MTSS / "shin splints").
- Utilise a range of therapeutic modalities including, exercise prescription, electrotherapies (shockwave, TENS, laser therapy, ultrasound), orthoses, footwear prescriptions, pharmacological prescriptions (for endorsed prescribers).
- Perform partial nail avulsion surgeries (to treat ingrown toenails).
- Inject local anaesthetics.
- Perform routine & general nail care treatments.
- Assess & manage pediatric pathologies.
- Assess & manage high-risk patient groups in both private and hospital settings, including; perform neurovascular assessments, diabetic wound care.
Education and training
[edit]United States
[edit]In the United States, medical and surgical care of the foot and ankle is mainly provided by two groups of professionals: podiatrists (Doctor of Podiatric Medicine or DPM) and orthopedists (MDs or DOs). The first two years of podiatric medical school is similar to training that either Doctors of Medicine (M.D.) or Doctors of Osteopathic Medicine (D.O.) receive, but with an emphasized scope on foot, ankle, and lower extremity. To enter a college of podiatric medicine, the student must first complete at least three years or 90 semester hours of college credit at an accredited institution. Biology, chemistry, organic chemistry, physics (all science courses require a lab) and English are among the required subjects. Over 95% of the students who enter a college of podiatric medicine have a bachelor's degree. Many have also completed some graduate study. Before entering a college of podiatric medicine, the student must take the MCAT (Medical College Admissions Test).[16] In 2019, the average MCAT score for matriculants was 499.6 and the average undergraduate cGPA was 3.3.[17] There are 11 colleges of podiatric medicine in the United States.[18] They all receive accreditation from the Council on Podiatric Medical Education, which is recognized by the U.S. Secretary of Education and the Council on Higher Education Accreditation. All of the colleges grant the degree of Doctor of Podiatric Medicine (DPM).[19]
The four-year podiatric medical school is followed by a hospital based residency, which is hands-on post-doctoral training. Their residency model was standardized to 3-years of post-graduate training in 2011 (with some programs lasting 4 years in length), and the residency is now known as the Podiatric Medicine and Surgery Residency (PMSR) with almost all now having an added Reconstructive Rearfoot and Ankle (RRA) credential. Podiatric residents rotate through core areas of medicine and surgery. They work alongside their MD and DO counterparts in such rotations as emergency medicine, internal medicine, infectious disease, behavioral medicine, physical medicine and rehabilitation (PM&R), vascular surgery, general surgery, orthopedic surgery, plastic surgery, dermatology and podiatric surgery and medicine. Fellowship training is available after residency in such fields such as foot and ankle traumatology, lower extremity reconstruction, or limb salvage.
Upon completion of their residency, podiatrists can decide to become board certified by a number of specialty boards including the American Board of Podiatric Medicine (ABPM) and/or the American Board of Foot and Ankle Surgery (ABFAS), which are both approved by the profession's accrediting agency, the CPME, and both have been certifying podiatrists since the 1970s. Though the ABPM and ABFAS are more common, other boards not recognized by CPME are challenging the status quo confer board qualified/certified status. The American Board of Multiple Specialties in Podiatry (ABMSP) is one additional option and has been certifying podiatrists since 1998.[20]
The DPM superseded the historical DSC (Doctor of Surgical Chiropody) degree in the 1960s.
Australia
[edit]Australian podiatrists complete an undergraduate degree of Bachelor of Podiatry or Bachelor of Podiatric Medicine ranging from 3 to 4 years of education. The first 2 years of this program are generally focused on various biomedical science subjects including anatomy, medical chemistry, biochemistry, physiology, pathophysiology, sociology and patient psychology, similar to the medical curriculum and that of other allied health disciplines.
The following two years will then be spent focusing on podiatry specific areas such as podiatric biomechanics and human gait, podiatric orthopaedics or the non-surgical management of foot abnormalities, pharmacology and prescribing, general medicine, general pathology, local and general anaesthesia, and surgical procedural techniques such as partial and total nail avulsions, matricectomy, cryotherapy, wound debridement and care, enucleation, and other cutaneous and electro-surgical procedures such as electro-desiccation, fulagaration and electrosection. During the initial two years of study, podiatry students begin clinical placements, practicals and skills labs which give them exposure to a wide range of patients and treatment modalities. For example; diabetic foot assessments, gait & biomechanical assessments, orthoses manufacture, clinical history taking, diagnostic imaging and general podiatry care.
Other topics studied in the final years of the degree include, podiatric sports medicine, exercise prescription & rehabilitation, advanced wound care and paediatric podiatry (paediatric gait, growth & developmental disorders).
Postgraduate courses in podiatric therapeutics and prescribing are required for having endorsements in scheduled medicines.
The Australian Podiatry Association supports Career Framework credentials, that recognise advanced competencies and clinical skills of podiatrists in Australia. The purpose is to provide an enhanced career progression beyond initial training that is both clear and transparent to consumers and the profession. In awarding the credential, the APodA can verify podiatrists have demonstrated and provided evidence of competency in their clinical interest area and undergone a rigorous assessment process.
The APodA currently awards credentials in two clinical interest areas: - Paediatrics - Sports/Biomechanics
The curriculum and assessment of The APodA Career Framework has been structured around the CanMEDS framework. CanMEDS is a universally recognised and adopted physician competency framework. A credentialled podiatrist will therefore personify and seamlessly integrate the competencies of all seven CanMEDS Roles:
- Medical Expert
- Communicator
- Collaborator
- Leader
- Health Advocate
- Scholar
- Professional
Only current APodA members are eligible to promote their credentialling. That is, the title is only available to be used by active members of the Australian Podiatry Association.
All podiatrists are required to register with Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency (AHPRA) prior to be licensed to practice in Australia. Registration is required annually and there is a minimum registration standard that includes; - Completing 20 hours of continuing professional development (CPD) hours (additional hours are required for podiatric surgeons and podiatrists who are endorsed to prescribe scheduled medicines). - Having current professional indemnity insurance. - Having current CPR, First Aid & Anaphylaxis training.
Podiatric surgery in Australia
[edit]Podiatric surgeons are specialist podiatrists who have completed extensive, post-graduate medical and surgical training and perform reconstructive surgery of the foot and ankle. The qualifications of podiatric surgeons are recognised by Australian state and federal governments. It is an approved specialty by the AHPRA. Podiatric surgeons are included within both the Health Insurance Act and the National Health Act. The Podiatry Board of Australia recognizes 3 pathways to attain specialist registration as a Podiatric Surgeon:[21]
- Fellowship of the Australasian College of Podiatric Surgeons
- Doctor of Podiatric Surgery, University of Western Australia
- Eligibility for Fellowship of the Australasian College of Podiatric Surgeons
Podiatric surgical qualifications are a post-graduate speciality of the podiatric profession. Before attaining a podiatric surgical fellowship qualification, a podiatrist must complete an extensive training program, including:
- Bachelor of Applied Science degree, majoring in Podiatry (4 years)
- Minimum of 2 years post-graduate clinical practice
- Master of Podiatry (2 years full-time university degree)
- A 3-stage surgical fellowship training under supervision of the ACPS (4 to 6 years)
- International residency training (usually in the UK and USA)
- Demonstrated mastery of knowledge in foot and ankle surgery by passing oral and written examinations administered by the ACPS
New Zealand
[edit]Only one university, Auckland University of Technology (AUT), offers training to become a podiatrist. Podiatrists must have a Bachelor of Health Science majoring in podiatry from AUT, or an overseas qualification recognised by the Podiatrists Board of New Zealand, be registered with the Podiatrists Board of New Zealand and have a current Annual Practising Certificate.[22]
Canada
[edit]In Canada, the definition and scope of the practice of podiatry varies provincially. For instance, in some provinces like British Columbia and Alberta, the standards are the same as in the United States where the Doctor of Podiatric Medicine (DPM) is the accepted qualification.
Quebec, too, has recently changed to the DPM level of training, although other academic designations may also register. Also in Quebec, in 2004, Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières started the first program of Podiatric Medicine in Canada based on the American definition of podiatry. In the prairie and Atlantic provinces, the standard was originally based on the British model now called podiatry (chiropody). That model of podiatry is currently the accepted model for most of the world including the United Kingdom, Australia and South Africa.
The province of Ontario has been registering Chiropodists since July 1993 (when the Ontario Government imposed a cap on new podiatrists). If a registered podiatrist from outside of Ontario relocates to Ontario they are required to register with the province and practice as a chiropodist. Podiatrists who were practising in Ontario previous to the imposed provincial cap were 'grandfathered' and allowed to keep the title of podiatrist as a subclass of chiropody. The scope of these 'grandfathered' (mostly American trained) podiatrists includes boney procedures of the forefoot and the ordering of x-rays in addition to the scope of the chiropodist.
In Ontario, podiatrists are required to have a "Doctor of Podiatric Medicine/DPM" degree (a post-baccalaureate, four-year degree), where the majority of chiropodists currently practising hold a post-secondary diploma in chiropody, although many also have some university level schooling or a baccalaureate degree in the sciences or in another field. Podiatrists may bill OHIP for their services; chiropodists may not. Podiatrists may "communicate a diagnosis" to their patients (or to their patients' representatives) and perform surgical procedures on the bones of the forefoot; chiropodists may do neither.[23]
Chiropodists and podiatrists are regulated by the College of Chiropodists of Ontario, which had 594 chiropodists and 65 podiatrists registered as of 29 July 2015.[24]
The only English-speaking Chiropody program in Canada, in which also has a working Chiropody Clinic on campus for students to treat patients under the supervision of licensed Chiropodists is The Michener Institute. According to The Michener Institute website, Chiropody is a branch of medical science that involves the assessment and management of foot and lower limb disorders. This includes the management of a wide variety of disorders, injuries, foot deformities, infections and local manifestations of systemic conditions. A Chiropodist is a primary care professional practising in podiatric medicine in Ontario that specializes in assessment, management and prevention of diseases and disorders of the foot. An essential member of the inter professional healthcare team, the Chiropodist is skilled in assessing the needs of their patients and of managing both chronic and acute conditions affecting foot and lower limb function. As a primary care provider capable of independent clinical practice, these skills are often practised independent of medical referral and medical supervision.
United Kingdom
[edit]In the UK, podiatrists usually undertake a 3-year undergraduate Bachelor of Science (Podiatry). Podiatric Surgeons usually undertake fellowships and postgraduate studies. The scope of practice of a podiatrist falls into four key categories:
- General clinics
- Biomechanics
- High-risk patient management
- Surgery.
There are two levels of surgical practice. As part of general podiatric care, podiatrists as HPC (Health Professions Council)-registered practitioners are involved with nail-and-minor-soft-tissue surgical procedures and qualified to administer local anaesthetics.
From 1 August 2012, the HPC is being rebranded to the HCPC (Health & Care Professions Council) as they are expanding their remit to include Social Workers.[25] The old term of "State Registered" has been defunct for some time and is no longer used since the creation of the HPC.
Some podiatrists go on to develop and train as podiatric surgeons, who surgically manage bone and joint disorders within the foot. It is to this latter group (Podiatric Surgeons) that the guidelines apply. Fellowship requires a minimum of six-years postgraduate training. This includes a two- or three-year surgical residency with an approved centre. Podiatric surgeons acquire comprehensive knowledge of related subjects including pharmacology, regional anaesthetic techniques and radiographic interpretation, as well as in-depth knowledge of foot surgery. The Surgical Faculty of the College of Podiatrists has set the standards for fellowship.
In 2019, a 23% drop in podiatry students in the UK was reported. The Conference of Postgraduate Medical Deans called for full payment of their tuition fees and the introduction of a maintenance grant for healthcare students.[26]
References
[edit]- ^ "Question: What is podiatry?". Ohio Podiatric Medical Association. Archived from the original on 2014-01-02. Retrieved 2012-06-27.
- ^ "WHAT'S THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A PODIATRIST AND A CHIROPODIST? | Essex Union Podiatry". essexunionpodiatry.com. 2020-05-06. Retrieved 2023-01-14.
- ^ "What is Podiatric Surgery?" (PDF). Australasian College of Podiatric Surgeons. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 March 2012. Retrieved 25 August 2012.
- ^ "ACFAS - Fellowship Resources". www.acfas.org.
- ^ "ACFAS - Policy & Advocacy". www.acfas.org. Retrieved 2023-04-15.
- ^ "Quick Facts: Podiatrists". compensation. MGMA.
- ^ "Physician - Podiatry Salary".
- ^ "Medical Specialty: Podiatric Medicine | Kent State University".
- ^ "ACPS_Homepage". www.acps.edu.au.
- ^ a b c "Advanced Practicing Podiatrists – High Risk Foot". App-hrf.com.au. 2012-10-23. Archived from the original on 2013-04-19. Retrieved 2012-11-08.
- ^ AUSTRALASIAN PODIATRIC RHEUMATOLOGY SPECIALIST INTEREST GROUP Archived 2013-08-09 at the Wayback Machine
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