Ladin Keren, Lin Naomi, Hahn Emily, Zhang Gregory, Koch-Weser Susan, Weiner Daniel E
Department of Occupational Therapy, Tufts University, Medford, MA, USA.
Research on Aging, Ethics, and Community Health, Tufts University, Medford, MA, USA.
Nephrol Dial Transplant. 2017 Aug 1;32(8):1394-1401. doi: 10.1093/ndt/gfw307.
Although shared decision-making (SDM) can better align patient preferences with treatment, barriers remain incompletely understood and the impact on patient satisfaction is unknown.
This is a qualitative study with semistructured interviews. A purposive sample of prevalent dialysis patients ≥65 years of age at two facilities in Greater Boston were selected for diversity in time from initiation, race, modality and vintage. A codebook was developed and interrater reliability was 89%. Codes were discussed and organized into themes.
A total of 31 interviews with 23 in-center hemodialysis patients, 1 home hemodialysis patient and 7 peritoneal dialysis patients were completed. The mean age was 76 ± 9 years. Two dominant themes (with related subthemes) emerged: decision-making experiences and satisfaction, and barriers to SDM. Subthemes included negative versus positive decision-making experiences, struggling for autonomy, being a 'good patient' and lack of choice. In spite of believing that dialysis initiation should be the patient's choice, no patients perceived that they had made a choice. Patients explained that this is due to the perception of imminent death or that the decision to start dialysis belonged to physicians. Clinicians and family frequently overrode patient preferences, with patient autonomy honored mostly to select dialysis modality. Poor decision-making experiences were associated with low treatment satisfaction.
Despite recommendations for SDM, many older patients were unaware that dialysis initiation was voluntary, held mistaken beliefs about their prognosis and were not engaged in decision-making, resulting in poor satisfaction. Patients desired greater information, specifically focusing on the acuity of their choice, prognosis and goals of care.
尽管共同决策(SDM)能够使患者偏好与治疗更好地匹配,但相关障碍仍未被完全理解,且其对患者满意度的影响尚不清楚。
这是一项采用半结构化访谈的定性研究。从大波士顿地区两家机构中选取年龄≥65岁的现患透析患者作为目的抽样,以确保在透析起始时间、种族、透析方式和透析年限方面具有多样性。制定了编码手册,评分者间信度为89%。对编码进行讨论并归纳为主题。
共完成了31次访谈,其中包括23名中心血液透析患者、1名家庭血液透析患者和7名腹膜透析患者。平均年龄为76±9岁。出现了两个主要主题(以及相关子主题):决策体验与满意度,以及共同决策的障碍。子主题包括消极与积极的决策体验、争取自主权、做“好患者”以及缺乏选择。尽管患者认为透析起始应由患者自己决定,但没有患者觉得自己做出了选择。患者解释说,这是因为他们觉得死亡迫在眉睫,或者认为开始透析的决定属于医生。临床医生和家属经常无视患者的偏好,患者自主权主要在选择透析方式时得到尊重。糟糕的决策体验与较低的治疗满意度相关。
尽管有共同决策的建议,但许多老年患者并未意识到透析起始是自愿的,对自己的预后存在错误认知,且未参与决策,导致满意度较低。患者希望获得更多信息,特别是关于他们选择的紧迫性、预后和护理目标的信息。