University of Washington, Seattle, WA; Health Services Research and Development Center, VA Puget Sound Health Care System, Seattle, WA.
University of Washington, Seattle, WA; Cambia Palliative Care Center of Excellence, University of Washington, Seattle, WA.
Am J Kidney Dis. 2021 Mar;77(3):355-364.e1. doi: 10.1053/j.ajkd.2020.07.026. Epub 2020 Sep 30.
RATIONALE & OBJECTIVE: Little is known about perceptions of conservative care among patients with advanced kidney disease in the United States.
Qualitative study using cognitive interviewing about attitudes regarding conservative care using decision aids on treatments for advanced kidney disease developed outside the United States.
SETTING & PARTICIPANTS: 14 patients 75 years or older with advanced kidney disease, defined as estimated glomerular filtration rate≤20mL/min/1.73m and not receiving maintenance dialysis, and 6 of their family members.
Thematic analysis of participants' reactions to descriptions of conservative care taken from various clinical care decision aids.
Participants were mostly White (n=15) and had at least some college education (n=16). Four themes emerged from analysis of interviews: (1) core elements of conservative care: aspects of conservative care that were appealing to participants included a whole-person, team-based, and structured approach to care that focused on symptom management, maintaining current lifestyle, and managing health setbacks; (2) importance of how conservative care is framed: participants were more receptive to conservative care when this was framed as an active rather than passive treatment approach and were receptive to statements of uncertainty about future course of illness and prognosis; (3) an explicit approach to shared decision making: participants believed decisions about conservative care and dialysis should address considerations about risk and benefits of treatment options, family and clinician perspectives, and patients' goals, values, and preferences; and (4) relationship between conservative care and dialysis: although conservative care models outside the United States are generally intended to serve as an alternative to dialysis, participants' comments implied that they did not see conservative care and dialysis as mutually exclusive.
Themes identified may not generalize to the broader population of US patients with advanced kidney disease and their family members.
Participants were favorably disposed to a whole-person multidisciplinary approach to conservative care, especially when framed as an active treatment approach. Models of conservative care excluding the possibility of dialysis were less embraced, suggesting that current models will require adaptation to meet the needs of US patients and their families.
在美国,对于晚期肾病患者对保守治疗的看法知之甚少。
使用认知访谈的定性研究,探讨使用美国以外开发的治疗晚期肾病决策辅助工具对保守治疗的态度。
14 名年龄在 75 岁及以上的晚期肾病患者,定义为估算肾小球滤过率≤20ml/min/1.73m2,且未接受维持性透析,以及他们的 6 名家属。
对参与者对来自各种临床护理决策辅助工具的保守护理描述的反应进行主题分析。
参与者主要为白人(n=15),至少受过大学教育(n=16)。从访谈分析中得出了四个主题:(1)保守治疗的核心要素:对参与者有吸引力的保守治疗方面包括一个整体的、以团队为基础的、结构化的治疗方法,重点是症状管理、维持当前的生活方式和管理健康挫折;(2)保守治疗框架的重要性:当保守治疗被框架为一种积极而不是消极的治疗方法时,参与者更容易接受保守治疗,并且更容易接受关于疾病未来进程和预后的不确定性陈述;(3)明确的共同决策方法:参与者认为关于保守治疗和透析的决策应该解决治疗方案的风险和益处、家庭和临床医生的观点以及患者的目标、价值观和偏好的考虑因素;(4)保守治疗与透析之间的关系:尽管美国以外的保守治疗模式通常旨在替代透析,但参与者的评论暗示他们并不认为保守治疗和透析是相互排斥的。
确定的主题可能不适用于更广泛的美国晚期肾病患者及其家属群体。
参与者对整体多学科保守治疗方法持有利态度,尤其是当这种方法被框架为一种积极的治疗方法时。排除透析可能性的保守治疗模式不太受欢迎,这表明当前模式将需要适应,以满足美国患者及其家属的需求。