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Review Article

The influence of standards and clinical guidelines on prosthetic and orthotic service quality: a scoping review

ORCID Icon, , , , ORCID Icon & ORCID Icon
Pages 2458-2465 | Received 24 Oct 2016, Accepted 24 May 2017, Published online: 20 Jun 2017
 

Abstract

Objectives: Standards and guidelines are an integral part of prosthetic and orthotic service delivery in the developed world underpinned by an assumption that they lead to improved services. Implementing them has a cost, however, and that cost needs to be justified, particularly in resource-limited environments. This scoping review thus asks the question, “What is the evidence of the impact of standards and guidelines on service delivery outcomes in prosthetics and orthotics?”

Materials and methods: A structured search of three electronic databases (Medline, Scopus and Web of Science) followed by manual searching of title, abstract and full text, yielded 29 articles.

Results: Four categories of papers were identified: Descriptions and Commentaries (17 papers), Guideline Development (7), Guideline Testing (2) and Standards implementation (3). No articles were explicitly designed to assess the impact of standards and guidelines on service delivery outcomes in prosthetics and orthotics.

Discussion and conclusion: Studies tended to be commentaries on or descriptions of guideline development, testing or implementation of standards. The literature is not sufficiently well developed to warrant the cost and effort of a systematic review. Future primary research should seek to demonstrate whether and how guidelines and standards improve the outcomes for people that require prostheses, orthoses and other assistive devices.

    Implications for Rehabilitation

  • International Standards and Clinical Guidelines are now an integral part of clinical service provision in prosthetics and orthotics in the developed world.

  • Complying with standards and guidelines has a cost and, particularly in resource-limited environments, it should be possible to justify this in terms of the resulting benefits.

  • This scoping review concludes that there have been no previous studies designed to directly quantify the effects of implementing standards and guidelines on service delivery.

Disclosure statement

The authors report no declarations of interest.

Additional information

Funding

Isfahan University of Medical Sciences, (MUI-194211) and United States Agency for International Development (DFD-A-00-08-00309-00).

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