Title: Feet and Footwear
1Feet and Footwear
- A match made in Heaven?
- Or
- The Odd Couple?
2Why is Footwear so important?
- When an wound occurs we tend to concentrate on
healing the wound. - We should start by trying to find and eliminate
the cause - Footwear examination and History are vital.
3Why do we wear any Footwear?
- Protection
- Weather, environment.
- Comfort
- Warmth, ventilation
- Functional for Activity
- Walking, Running, Sports, Dancing
- Cultural Aesthetic
- Matches outfit, Fashionable,
4What are our Feet for?
- Locomotion
- Stability
- Cultural Aesthetic?
- Foot Size Male Large Feet attractive
- Female Small Feet attractive
- Controlling Foot Shape
- Chinese Foot Binding and Cosmetic Surgery
5Chinese Foot Binding or the Golden Lotus
Started in 900AD and finished completely in about
1949. Started at the age of 2-3 the ideal foot
length was 3-4 inches
6The Lotus shoe for the bound foot
7What foot look is achieved by foot binding?
- The forefoot is moved closer to the rearfoot
- The Arch is made higher
- The overall foot length is much shorter
- The 2,3,4 and 5th toes are clawed under the foot
8Are modern societies any less obsessed with
changing foot shapes for aesthetic reasons?
9What foot look is achieved by a high heeled
shoe?
- The forefoot is moved closer to the rearfoot
- The Arch is made higher
- (looked at from the side including shoe)
- The foot length on the ground is much shorter
- The 2,3,4 and 5th toes are clawed due to
narrowing of the shoe
10Modern societies also use surgery to alter the
foot shape
- Surgeons in the USA debate the ethics of cosmetic
foot surgery - How far would you go to wear a fashionable pair
of shoes - Bunion surgery or Amputation perhaps?
11If Shoe Won't Fit, Fix the Foot? Popular Surgery
Raises Concern
- ''I think it's reprehensible for a physician to
correct someone's feet so they can get into Jimmy
Choo shoes,'' said Dr. Sharon Dreeben, an
orthopaedic surgeon in La Jolla, California., who
is chairwoman of the foot and ankle society's
public education committee. (New York Times
7-12-03)
12If Shoe Won't Fit, Fix the Foot? Popular Surgery
Raises Concern
- But advocates for the procedures say that
critics simply do not understand the importance
of high heels. - ''Some of these women invest more in their shoes
than they do in the stock market,'' said Dr.
Suzanne M. Levine. (New York Times 7-12-03)
13Shoe Fit in Context
- Shoe fitting and suitability
- This can only be decided when the foot that is
going to wear the shoe is present for you to
compare the shoe with the foot - The shoes that seem good may be awful for the
patients foot
14Lets be Interactive
- Take off one shoe and place it on the table in
front of you - If you had to be honest would you think it was a
good well fitting shoe or a poor fitting one?
15Template testing of shoe fit
- Take a cereal packet or any card large enough for
your foot and place it on the floor and put your
bare foot onto them - Draw around the outline of your foot
- Use scissors to cut the template out
16Template testing of shoe fit
- Place the template you made into your shoe
- Now look inside is the fit okay?
- Has the card buckled at the edges?
- This represents the deformity that may occur to
get your foot into that shoe
17Template testing of shoe fit
- Did the fit of the template match your original
thoughts as to whether the shoe was likely to be
a good fit? - This is a relatively quick test as even a good
looking sensible shoe is dangerous if it is too
short for the foot.
18Footwear Advice
- Good Shoe?
- Good Fit
- Length
- Width (Ball Toes)
- Depth
- Stable
- Supportive?
- Smooth internal seams
- Fastenings
- Bad Shoe?
- Poor Fit
- Too long or short
- Too narrow
- Too shallow
- Unstable
- Not Supportive?
- Rough internal seams
- No Fastenings
19Why is it difficult to get pts to change footwear
styles?
- Social and cultural pressure is HUGE!!
- Fashion is more important than comfort to a lot
of people. - People want to fit in with their peer group.
20Why is there pressure to wear a certain type of
shoe?
- Throughout history shoes have been an adornment
for the foot rather than for the pure function of
warmth and comfort. - For example for two hundred years in Europe the
Chopine was the Queen of Platforms (1400-1600)
especially with courtesans and high nobility.
21The Chopine
22The Chopine
- However Venetian prostitutes started to wear
Chopines as the shoes elevated them, when
lingering in dark doorways waiting for customers,
to a height which would make them noticeable. The
fashion for Chopines died out in the upper
echelons when the lower orders started wearing
them.
23The High Heel
- The British in the 17th century became very
concerned for the morals of women if they used
false devices to trick men into marrying them - Especially by the use of high heeled shoes along
with cosmetics, wigs and other fakeries.
24Act of Parliament 1670
- Be it resolved that all women, of whatever age,
rank, profession, or degree whether virgin maids
or widows that shall after the passing of this
Act, impose upon and betray into matrimony any of
His Majesty's male subjects, by scents, paints,
cosmetics, washes, artificial teeth, false hair,
Spanish wool, iron stays, hoops, high-heeled
shoes, or bolstered hips, shall incur the penalty
of the laws now in force against witchcraft,
sorcery, and such like misdemeanours, and that
the marriage, upon conviction, shall stand null
and void.
25Is it just the women being vain?
- Men wore the modern heel high first in 17th
century France as an adaptation of the riding
footwear that required a heel for stirrups - But the heel of the shoe became higher (3-4) and
thinner until it was just a court fashion for
men not suitable at all for riding.
26The Poulaine
- Through the 13th and 15th centuries the Poulaine
or Krackowe was infamous as the footwear for
aspiring men. - A flat soled shoe with a very long narrow toe
front made from a roll of leather extended out
the front
27The Poulaine
28The Church bans the Poulaine
- The Church was appalled at the outrageous sexual
overtones of the Poulaine and thought it might
cause Pagan worship to return - The shoe became infamous as an under the table
flirtatious device to raise female garments and
well just imagine the rest!
29So throughout history the shoe is also about
power and wealth
- Sexual power
- Change of body shape
- Very high heels (dominance) plus submission
(inability to run away) - Long toes (phallic symbol) Winklepicker or
Poulaine - Show of wealth
- Cant walk cant work
- Shoes too expensive to scuff or damage proves
doesnt work for a living - Designer shoes (mostly male designers)
30Can we learn from History?
- People will always want to be fashionable (both
men and women) - You dont have to wear fashionable shoes all day
every day. You need a functional everyday shoe - Remember Fashion is not comfortable and Comfort
is not fashionable.
31Balance
- Patient compliance with footwear is a balancing
act between what they perceive as their need for
a certain style of shoe and what you as a
clinician would like them to wear. - Try for comfort for at least 80 of the day
- Especially for work or daywear.
32Buying retail shoes (leaflet)
- Buy in the afternoon
- Sizes vary widely between manufacturers and
styles so dont have rigid preconceived ideas on
size - Everyday shoes should be right length width and
depth with wide stable heel that is not too high.
33Patients are not the best judges
34Therapeutic Footwear
- When foot deformities make it impossible to find
retail shoes that fit - Needs consultant referral
- Requires Patient Compliance
- Needs to be worn 65 of time to be worthwhile
35Worn or Wardrobe?
- A lack of preplanning and patient consultation
can lead to a waste of resources. - Therapeutic shoes issued for good medical reasons
will not be worn as the overriding social
pressure of fashion stops the person from wearing
them (become clinic shoes!)
36Pre planning
- If therapeutic footwear is deemed necessary long
preliminary talks with the patient are vital - They need to be convinced of the need and that
the shoes issued need not be hideous granny
shoes or Frankenstein Boots.
37Measuring
38Bespoke or Stock
- Bespoke are made to measure and more expensive
but may be necessary if LLD or deformities are
too gross even for stock shoes - Stock shoes are made on lasts that are wider and
deeper than ordinary retail shoe lasts
39Summary
- Check patients current footwear if there is an
unexplained foot lesion - Advise if retail shoes suitable
- Refer if therapeutic shoes are necessary
- Assess patients willingness to change
40Summary of everyday shoe fit
- Right Length and a close fit at heel without rubs
- No gaping at topline
- No local tight spots or rough internal seams
- Broad heel of suitable height
- Adequate width depth for 1st MP joint
- Functional fastening
41www.chiropods.co.uk
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