Elliott Meghan J, Ravani Pietro, Quinn Robert R, Oliver Matthew J, Love Shannan, MacRae Jennifer, Hiremath Swapnil, Friesen Sarah, James Matthew T, King-Shier Kathryn M
Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada; Department of Community Health Sciences, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada; Department of Community Health Sciences, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Am J Kidney Dis. 2023 Jan;81(1):48-58.e1. doi: 10.1053/j.ajkd.2022.05.016. Epub 2022 Jul 20.
RATIONALE & OBJECTIVE: Collaborative approaches to vascular access selection are being increasingly encouraged to elicit patients' preferences and priorities where no unequivocally superior choice exists. We explored how patients, their caregivers, and clinicians integrate principles of shared decision making when engaging in vascular access discussions.
Qualitative description.
SETTING & PARTICIPANTS: Semistructured interviews with a purposive sample of patients, their caregivers, and clinicians from outpatient hemodialysis programs in Alberta, Canada.
We used a thematic analysis approach to inductively code transcripts and generate themes to capture key concepts related to vascular access shared decision making across participant roles.
42 individuals (19 patients, 2 caregivers, 21 clinicians) participated in this study. Participants identified how access-related decisions follow a series of major decisions about kidney replacement therapy and care goals that influence vascular access preferences and choice. Vascular access shared decision making was strengthened through integration of vascular access selection with dialysis-related decisions and timely, tailored, and balanced exchange of information between patients and their care team. Participants described how opportunities to revisit the vascular access decision before and after dialysis initiation helped prepare patients for their access and encouraged ongoing alignment between patients' care priorities and treatment plans. Where shared decision making was undermined, hemodialysis via a catheter ensued as the most readily available vascular access option.
Our study was limited to patients and clinicians from hemodialysis care settings and included few caregiver participants.
Findings suggest that earlier, or upstream, decisions about kidney replacement therapies influence how and when vascular access decisions are made. Repeated vascular access discussions that are integrated with other higher-level decisions are needed to promote vascular access shared decision making and preparedness.
在不存在绝对优越选择的情况下,越来越鼓励采用协作方法来选择血管通路,以了解患者的偏好和优先事项。我们探讨了患者、其护理人员和临床医生在进行血管通路讨论时如何整合共同决策原则。
定性描述。
对来自加拿大艾伯塔省门诊血液透析项目的患者、其护理人员和临床医生进行有目的抽样的半结构化访谈。
我们采用主题分析方法对转录本进行归纳编码,并生成主题,以捕捉与跨参与者角色的血管通路共同决策相关的关键概念。
42人(19名患者、2名护理人员、21名临床医生)参与了本研究。参与者确定了与通路相关的决策如何遵循一系列关于肾脏替代治疗和护理目标的主要决策,这些决策会影响血管通路的偏好和选择。通过将血管通路选择与透析相关决策相结合,以及患者与其护理团队之间及时、量身定制且平衡的信息交流,加强了血管通路共同决策。参与者描述了在开始透析之前和之后重新审视血管通路决策的机会如何帮助患者为其通路做好准备,并鼓励患者的护理优先事项与治疗计划持续保持一致。在共同决策受到破坏的情况下,通过导管进行血液透析成为最容易获得的血管通路选择。
我们的研究仅限于血液透析护理环境中的患者和临床医生,且护理人员参与者较少。
研究结果表明,关于肾脏替代治疗的早期或上游决策会影响血管通路决策的方式和时间。需要将重复的血管通路讨论与其他更高层次的决策相结合,以促进血管通路共同决策和准备工作。