Metzger Maureen, Yoder Jonathan, Fitzgibbon Kara, Blackhall Leslie, Abdel-Rahman Emaad
University of Virginia School of Nursing, Charlottesville, VA.
Hemodialysis Unit and Home Hemodialysis Program, University of Virginia Health, University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, VA.
Kidney Med. 2021 Mar 31;3(3):368-377.e1. doi: 10.1016/j.xkme.2021.01.008. eCollection 2021 May-Jun.
RATIONALE & OBJECTIVE: Despite calls for integrating palliative care into chronic kidney disease (CKD) care, uptake remains low. The study aim was to describe clinicians' perceptions of the clinical and research priorities in CKD care and the main barriers to collaboration.
This was a descriptive cross-sectional study using an online survey developed by clinicians and researchers as the primary data collection method.
SETTING & PARTICIPANTS: Clinicians in nephrology and palliative care departments (N = 195) at an academic health center in Virginia were invited to participate. Of the 48.7% (n = 95) who responded, most were registered nurses (65.3%) in nephrology (80%) with more than 15 years' experience (40%).
Factors including discipline (nursing, social work, and physician) and practice area (palliative care or nephrology) were assessed.
Main outcomes of interest included clinicians' perceptions of the role of palliative care, barriers to collaboration, and the top clinical and research priorities for patients with advanced CKD.
Survey data were analyzed using SPSS using descriptive statistics.
Respondents reported being comfortable caring for patients near the end of life and endorsed advance care planning and collaboration between nephrology and palliative care teams. However, both rarely happen. Fragmentation, or poor coordination of care, was perceived to be the main barrier to collaboration. Perceptions regarding collaboration facilitation differed; nephrology clinicians identified patient/family education as the most important facilitator while palliative care clinicians identified clinician education as most important. Top clinical priorities differed. Palliative care clinicians reported pain/symptom management as taking priority while nephrology clinicians identified caregiver/family support. Developing interventions to support treatment-related decision making was the top research priority.
Results reflect perceptions of about half the clinicians at 1 academic health center.
Additional studies to capture patients' and families' perspectives and examine end-of-life care processes are needed. Results may inform future targeted interventions.
尽管呼吁将姑息治疗纳入慢性肾脏病(CKD)护理,但接受度仍然很低。本研究的目的是描述临床医生对CKD护理中临床和研究重点的看法以及合作的主要障碍。
这是一项描述性横断面研究,使用临床医生和研究人员开发的在线调查问卷作为主要数据收集方法。
邀请了弗吉尼亚州一家学术健康中心的肾脏病科和姑息治疗科的临床医生(N = 195)参与。在48.7%(n = 95)做出回应的人中,大多数是肾脏病科(80%)具有超过15年经验(40%)的注册护士(65.3%)。
评估了包括学科(护理、社会工作和医生)和执业领域(姑息治疗或肾脏病学)等因素。
主要关注的结果包括临床医生对姑息治疗作用的看法、合作障碍以及晚期CKD患者的首要临床和研究重点。
使用SPSS对调查数据进行描述性统计分析。
受访者表示愿意照顾临终患者,并认可预先护理计划以及肾脏病科和姑息治疗团队之间的合作。然而,这两者很少发生。护理分散或护理协调不佳被认为是合作的主要障碍。关于促进合作的看法存在差异;肾脏病科临床医生认为患者/家庭教育是最重要的促进因素,而姑息治疗临床医生则认为临床医生教育最为重要。首要临床重点不同。姑息治疗临床医生报告疼痛/症状管理为优先事项,而肾脏病科临床医生则确定照顾者/家庭支持为优先事项。开发支持治疗相关决策的干预措施是首要研究重点。
结果反映了一家学术健康中心约一半临床医生的看法。
需要进行更多研究以了解患者和家庭的观点并检查临终护理过程。研究结果可能为未来的针对性干预提供参考。