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Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Conceptually Similar Documents
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
Therapeutic footwear
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Reference ID
U278UDT
Headline
Therapeutic footwear
Description
A Health worker closely observes a persons feet to make an assessment.Â
Assessment for therapeutic footwear must check both feet closely, looking for:
Unusual foot / toe shapes Skin or nail problems Red areas Previous foot wounds (scars)Areas a shoe may rub.
Â
These are all things that can increase the risk that a shoe may cause pressure or rubbing. Pressure or rubbing can lead to discomfort, pain or a wound.
This illustration is from Training in Assistive Products (TAP)
Related
https://www.gate-tap.org/
Copyright
© WHO / Codi Ash
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No
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271.64 KB
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