Department of Occupational Therapy, Tufts University, Medford, MA; Research on Aging, Ethics, and Community Health, Tufts University, Medford, MA.
Research on Aging, Ethics, and Community Health, Tufts University, Medford, MA.
Am J Kidney Dis. 2018 May;71(5):627-635. doi: 10.1053/j.ajkd.2017.11.011. Epub 2018 Feb 1.
Although dialysis may not provide a large survival benefit for older patients with kidney failure, few are informed about conservative management. Barriers and facilitators to discussions about conservative management and nephrologists' decisions to present the option of conservative management may vary within the nephrology provider community.
Interview study of nephrologists.
SETTING & PARTICIPANTS: National sample of US nephrologists sampled based on sex, years in practice, practice type, and region.
Qualitative semistructured interviews continued until thematic saturation.
Thematic and narrative analysis of recorded and transcribed interviews.
Among 35 semistructured interviews with nephrologists from 18 practices, 37% described routinely discussing conservative management ("early adopters"). 5 themes and related subthemes reflected issues that influence nephrologists' decisions to discuss conservative management and their approaches to these discussions: struggling to define nephrologists' roles (determining treatment, instilling hope, and improving patient symptoms), circumventing end-of-life conversations (contending with prognostic uncertainty, fearing emotional backlash, jeopardizing relationships, and tailoring information), confronting institutional barriers (time constraints, care coordination, incentives for dialysis, and discomfort with varied conservative management approaches), conservative management as "no care," and moral distress. Nephrologists' approaches to conservative management discussions were shaped by perceptions of their roles and by a common view of conservative management as no care. Their willingness to pursue conservative management was influenced by provider- and institutional-level barriers and experiences with older patients who regretted or had been harmed by dialysis (moral distress). Early adopters routinely discussed conservative management as a way of relieving moral distress, whereas others who were more selective in discussing conservative management experienced greater distress.
Participants' views are likely most transferable to large academic medical centers, due to oversampling of academic clinicians.
Our findings clarify how moral distress serves as a catalyst for conservative management discussion and highlight points of intervention and mechanisms potentially underlying low conservative management use in the United States.
尽管透析可能无法为肾衰竭的老年患者带来显著的生存获益,但很少有人了解保守治疗。在肾病学提供者群体中,关于保守治疗的讨论的障碍和促进因素以及肾病学家提出保守治疗选择的决策可能有所不同。
对肾病学家的访谈研究。
根据性别、从业年限、执业类型和地区,从美国肾病学家中抽取全国性样本。
对记录和转录的访谈进行主题和叙述分析。
在对 18 个实践中的 35 名肾病学家进行的 35 次半结构化访谈中,有 37%的人描述了常规讨论保守治疗(“早期采用者”)。有 5 个主题和相关的子主题反映了影响肾病学家讨论保守治疗决策的问题及其讨论方法:努力定义肾病学家的角色(确定治疗、灌输希望和改善患者症状)、回避临终谈话(应对预后不确定性、担心情感反弹、危及关系和调整信息)、面对机构障碍(时间限制、护理协调、透析激励措施以及对不同保守治疗方法的不适)、保守治疗即“不治疗”和道德困境。肾病学家对保守治疗讨论的方法取决于他们对自身角色的看法,以及对保守治疗即不治疗的共同看法。他们对保守治疗的意愿受到提供者和机构层面障碍的影响,以及对因后悔或因透析而受到伤害的老年患者的经历(道德困境)的影响。早期采用者通常将保守治疗作为缓解道德困境的一种方式,而其他更有选择性地讨论保守治疗的人则经历了更大的困境。
由于对学术临床医生的过度抽样,参与者的观点可能最适用于大型学术医疗中心。
我们的研究结果阐明了道德困境如何成为保守治疗讨论的催化剂,并强调了在美国保守治疗使用率低的干预点和潜在机制。