Bowling C Barrett, Vandenberg Ann E, Phillips Lawrence S, McClellan William M, Johnson Theodore M, Echt Katharina V
Birmingham/Atlanta Geriatric Research, Education, and Clinical Center, Department of Veterans Affairs, Atlanta Veterans Affairs, Medical Center, Decatur, Georgia; and.
Departments of Medicine and.
Clin J Am Soc Nephrol. 2017 Apr 3;12(4):635-643. doi: 10.2215/CJN.06850616.
Patients with CKD are asked to perform self-management tasks including dietary changes, adhering to medications, avoiding nephrotoxic drugs, and self-monitoring hypertension and diabetes. Given the effect of aging on functional capacity, self-management may be especially challenging for older patients. However, little is known about the specific challenges older adults face maintaining CKD self-management regimens.
DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTS: We conducted an exploratory qualitative study designed to understand the relationship among factors facilitating or impeding CKD self-management in older adults. Six focus groups (=30) were held in August and September of 2014 with veterans≥70 years old with moderate-to-severe CKD receiving nephrology care at the Atlanta Veterans Affairs Medical Center. Grounded theory with a constant comparative method was used to collect, code, and analyze data.
Participants had a mean age (range) of 75.1 (70.1-90.7) years, 60% were black, and 96.7% were men. The central organizing concept that emerged from these data were managing complexity. Participants typically did not have just one chronic condition, CKD, but a number of commonly co-occurring conditions. Recommendations for CKD self-management therefore occurred within a complex regimen of recommendations for managing other diseases. Participants identified overtly discordant treatment recommendations across chronic conditions ( arthritis and CKD). Prioritization emerged as one effective strategy for managing complexity (, focusing on BP control). Some patients arrived at the conclusion that they could group concordant recommendations to simplify their regimens (, protein restriction for both gout and CKD).
Among older veterans with moderate-to-severe CKD, multimorbidity presents a major challenge for CKD self-management. Because virtually all older adults with CKD have multimorbidity, an integrated treatment approach that supports self-management across commonly occurring conditions may be necessary to meet the needs of these patients.
慢性肾脏病(CKD)患者需进行自我管理任务,包括饮食调整、坚持用药、避免使用肾毒性药物以及自我监测高血压和糖尿病。鉴于衰老对功能能力的影响,自我管理对老年患者可能尤其具有挑战性。然而,对于老年人维持CKD自我管理方案所面临的具体挑战,我们知之甚少。
设计、地点、参与者与测量:我们开展了一项探索性定性研究,旨在了解促进或阻碍老年人CKD自我管理的因素之间的关系。2014年8月和9月,在亚特兰大退伍军人事务医疗中心,对70岁及以上患有中重度CKD并接受肾脏病护理的退伍军人进行了6次焦点小组访谈(共30人)。采用基于持续比较法的扎根理论来收集、编码和分析数据。
参与者的平均年龄(范围)为75.1(70.1 - 90.7)岁,60%为黑人,96.7%为男性。从这些数据中浮现出的核心组织概念是管理复杂性。参与者通常不止有一种慢性病,即CKD,而是有许多常见的共病情况。因此,CKD自我管理的建议是在管理其他疾病的复杂建议方案中出现的。参与者发现不同慢性病(关节炎和CKD)的治疗建议明显不一致。优先级排序成为管理复杂性的一种有效策略(如专注于血压控制)。一些患者得出结论,他们可以将一致的建议归为一组以简化方案(如痛风和CKD都需要蛋白质限制)。
在患有中重度CKD的老年退伍军人中,多种疾病并存对CKD自我管理构成了重大挑战。由于几乎所有患有CKD的老年人都有多种疾病并存,可能需要一种综合治疗方法来支持对常见疾病的自我管理,以满足这些患者的需求。