Department of Nephrology, Division of Medicine, Royal Darwin Hospital, Top End Health Services, PO Box 41326, Casuarina, NT 0811, Australia. Email:
Top End Health Services, Executive Suite Royal Darwin Hospital, PO Box 41326, Casuarina, NT 0811, Australia. Email:
Aust Health Rev. 2021 Mar;45(2):185-193. doi: 10.1071/AH20011.
Published evidence confirms poor access to wait-listing for kidney transplantation for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians from the Northern Territory. This study aimed to identify the practical causes and recommend improvement. Pathways to wait-listing for a kidney transplant were reviewed to identify potential barriers. Processes were mapped to identify potential problem areas, provide comparison of the actual versus the ideal, identify where data needed collecting and provide clear presentation of the processes. Staff involved in the work-up of patients going for wait-listing were asked to list the barriers. Data were collected for patients from the transplant database between 1 January 2017 to 31 August 2018. Quality improvement statistical processes and charts were used to analyse and present the results. There were 102 patients in the transplant work-up process; 81.4% were Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander, 71.6% were progressing with the work-up, 28.4% were on-hold. Of the 29 patients on hold, 92.9% were Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander. Causes of delays to wait-listing included: failure to attend appointments due to competing priorities and communication barriers, access and navigating complex pathways to specialist services, transport, co-morbidities requiring multiple tests and multiple specialty services, and pressures on dialysis and hospital bed capacity. In conclusion, barriers to wait-listing for kidney transplantation for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians are complex and can be addressed by redesigning healthcare provision, including increasing the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander workforce to provide education and patient navigation of the healthcare system and improve communication, streamlining investigations and coordinating specialist services.
已发表的证据证实,北领地的澳大利亚原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民获得肾脏移植候补名单的机会很差。本研究旨在确定实际原因并提出改进建议。审查了肾脏移植候补名单的途径,以确定潜在的障碍。绘制流程以确定潜在的问题领域,提供实际与理想之间的比较,确定需要收集数据的地方,并清晰呈现流程。要求参与患者候补名单工作的工作人员列出障碍。在 2017 年 1 月 1 日至 2018 年 8 月 31 日期间,从移植数据库中收集了患者的数据。使用质量改进统计流程和图表来分析和呈现结果。有 102 名患者接受了移植前的检查;81.4%是原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民,71.6%正在进行检查,28.4%处于暂停状态。在 29 名被搁置的患者中,92.9%是原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民。导致候补名单延迟的原因包括:由于竞争的优先事项和沟通障碍而未能参加预约,无法获得并遵循通往专科服务的复杂途径,交通,需要多次测试和多个专科服务的合并症,以及透析和医院床位容量的压力。总之,原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民澳大利亚人进行肾脏移植候补名单的障碍很复杂,可以通过重新设计医疗保健服务来解决,包括增加原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民劳动力,以提供教育和患者对医疗保健系统的导航,并改善沟通,简化调查和协调专科服务。