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艰难的对话:澳大利亚原住民患者对肾移植的看法。

Difficult conversations: Australian Indigenous patients' views on kidney transplantation.

作者信息

Devitt Jeannie, Anderson Kate, Cunningham Joan, Preece Cilla, Snelling Paul, Cass Alan

机构信息

Menzies School of Health Research, Darwin, Australia.

, Cairns, Australia.

出版信息

BMC Nephrol. 2017 Oct 11;18(1):310. doi: 10.1186/s12882-017-0726-z.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Indigenous Australians suffer a disproportionate burden of end stage kidney disease (ESKD) but are significantly less likely to receive a transplant. This study explores Indigenous ESKD patients' views on transplantation as a treatment option.

METHODS

The Improving Access to Kidney Transplants (IMPAKT) research program investigated barriers to kidney transplantation for Indigenous Australians. An interview study, conducted in 2005-2006, elicited illness experience narratives from 146 Indigenous patients, including views on transplant. Interviews were conducted at 26 sites that collectively treat the majority of Indigenous ESKD patients. Key themes were identified via team consensus meetings, providing a flexible framework and focus for continued coding.

RESULTS

Four inter-related themes were identified in patient commentary: a very high level (90% of respondents) of positive interest in transplantation; patients experienced a range of communication difficulties and felt uninformed about transplant; family involvement in decision-making was constrained by inadequate information; and patients needed to negotiate cultural and social sensitivities around transplantation.

CONCLUSIONS

Indigenous ESKD patients demonstrated an intense interest in transplantation preferring deceased over living kidney donation. Patients believe transplant is the path most likely to support the re-establishment of their 'normal' family life. Patients described themselves as poorly informed; most had only a rudimentary knowledge of the notion of transplant but no understanding of eligibility criteria, the transplant procedure and associated risks. Patients experienced multiple communication barriers that - taken together - undermine their engagement in treatment decision-making. Families and communities are disempowered because they also lack information to reach a shared understanding of transplantation. Cultural sensitivities associated with transplantation were described but these did not appear to constrain patients in making choices about their own health. Transplant units and local treatment providers should collaborate to develop user-friendly, culturally informed and region-specific patient education programs. Quality improvement cycles should underpin the development of national guidelines for patient education. Noting Indigenous patients' intense interest in transplantation, and nephrologists' concerns regarding poor transplant outcomes, research should prioritise exploring the predictors of transplant outcomes for Indigenous Australians.

摘要

背景

澳大利亚原住民终末期肾病(ESKD)负担过重,但接受移植的可能性要低得多。本研究探讨了原住民ESKD患者对移植作为一种治疗选择的看法。

方法

改善肾移植可及性(IMPAKT)研究项目调查了澳大利亚原住民肾移植的障碍。2005年至2006年进行的一项访谈研究,从146名原住民患者中收集了疾病经历叙述,包括对移植的看法。访谈在26个共同治疗大多数原住民ESKD患者的地点进行。通过团队共识会议确定关键主题,为持续编码提供灵活的框架和重点。

结果

在患者评论中确定了四个相互关联的主题:对移植有非常高的积极兴趣水平(90%的受访者);患者经历了一系列沟通困难,对移植了解不足;家庭参与决策受到信息不足的限制;患者需要协商围绕移植的文化和社会敏感性。

结论

原住民ESKD患者对移植表现出浓厚兴趣,更倾向于死后肾捐赠而非活体肾捐赠。患者认为移植是最有可能支持重建其“正常”家庭生活的途径。患者表示自己了解不足;大多数人对移植概念只有基本了解,但不了解资格标准、移植程序和相关风险。患者经历了多种沟通障碍,这些障碍共同削弱了他们参与治疗决策的能力。家庭和社区也因缺乏信息而无法就移植达成共同理解,从而失去了权力。描述了与移植相关的文化敏感性,但这些似乎并未限制患者对自身健康做出选择。移植单位和当地治疗提供者应合作制定方便用户、具有文化针对性且针对特定地区的患者教育计划。质量改进循环应作为制定全国患者教育指南的基础。鉴于原住民患者对移植的浓厚兴趣以及肾病学家对移植不良结果的担忧,研究应优先探索澳大利亚原住民移植结果的预测因素。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/59ec/5637064/cd806bee9b51/12882_2017_726_Fig1_HTML.jpg

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