Lipford Kristie J, McPherson Laura, Hamoda Reem, Browne Teri, Gander Jennifer C, Pastan Stephen O, Patzer Rachel E
Department of Surgery, Division of Transplantation, Emory University School of Medicine, 1639 Pierce Dr. NE, Atlanta, GA, 30322, USA.
College of Social Work, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC, USA.
BMC Nephrol. 2018 Jan 10;19(1):5. doi: 10.1186/s12882-017-0800-6.
Racial/ethnic, gender, and age disparities in access to renal transplantation among end-stage renal disease (ESRD) patients have been well documented, but few studies have explored health care staff attitudes towards these inequalities. Staff perceptions can influence patient care and outcomes, and identifying staff perceptions on disparities could aid in the development of potential interventions to address these health inequities. The objective of this study was to investigate dialysis staff (n = 509), primarily social workers and nurse managers, perceptions of renal transplant disparities in the Southeastern United States.
This is a mixed methods study that uses both deductive and inductive qualitative analysis of a dialysis staff survey conducted in 2012 using three open-ended questions that asked staff to discuss their perceptions of factors that may contribute to transplant disparities among African American, female, and elderly patients.
Study results suggested that the majority of staff (n = 255, 28%) perceived patients' low socioeconomic status as the primary theme related to why renal transplant disparities exist between African Americans and non-Hispanic whites. Staff cited patient perception of old age as a primary contributor (n = 188, 23%) to the disparity between young and elderly patients. The dialysis staff responses on gender transplant disparities suggested that staff were unaware of differences due to limited experience and observation (n = 76, 14.7%) of gender disparities.
These findings suggest that dialysis facilities should educate staff on existing renal transplantation disparities, particularly gender disparities, and collaboratively work with transplant facilities to develop strategies to actively address modifiable patient barriers for transplant.
终末期肾病(ESRD)患者在肾移植可及性方面存在种族/族裔、性别和年龄差异,这已得到充分记录,但很少有研究探讨医护人员对这些不平等现象的态度。医护人员的认知会影响患者护理及治疗结果,识别医护人员对差异的认知有助于制定潜在干预措施以解决这些健康不平等问题。本研究的目的是调查美国东南部透析工作人员(n = 509,主要是社会工作者和护士经理)对肾移植差异的认知。
这是一项混合方法研究,对2012年进行的透析工作人员调查采用演绎和归纳定性分析,调查使用了三个开放式问题,要求工作人员讨论他们对可能导致非裔美国人、女性和老年患者移植差异的因素的看法。
研究结果表明,大多数工作人员(n = 255,28%)认为患者社会经济地位低是与非裔美国人和非西班牙裔白人之间肾移植差异存在原因相关的主要主题。工作人员认为患者对老年的认知是年轻和老年患者之间差异的主要促成因素(n = 188,23%)。透析工作人员对性别移植差异的回答表明,由于对性别差异的经验和观察有限(n = 76,14.7%),工作人员并未意识到其中的差异。
这些发现表明,透析机构应就现有的肾移植差异,特别是性别差异,对工作人员进行教育,并与移植机构合作制定策略,积极解决可改变的患者移植障碍。