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艾伯塔省人如何“适应和应对”透析?一项横断面调查。

How Are Albertans "Adjusting to and Coping With" Dialysis? A Cross-Sectional Survey.

作者信息

Schick-Makaroff Kara, Berendonk Charlotte, Overwater Jordan, Streith Laura, Lee Loretta, Escoto Manuel, Cukor Daniel, Klarenbach Scott, Sawatzky Richard

机构信息

Faculty of Nursing, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada.

Rogosin Institute, New York, NY, USA.

出版信息

Can J Kidney Health Dis. 2022 Aug 23;9:20543581221118436. doi: 10.1177/20543581221118436. eCollection 2022.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Depression and anxiety are commonly reported (40% and 11%-52%) among adults receiving dialysis, compared with ~10% among all Canadians. Mental health in dialysis care is underrecognized and undertreated.

OBJECTIVE

(1) To describe preferences for mental health support reported by Albertans receiving dialysis; (2) to compare depression, anxiety, and quality-of-life (QOL) domains for people who would or would not engage in support for mental health; and (3) to explore sociodemographic, mental health, and QOL domains that explain whether people would or would not engage in support for mental health.

DESIGN

A cross-sectional survey.

SETTING

Alberta, Canada.

PATIENTS

Adults receiving all modalities of dialysis (N = 2972).

MEASUREMENTS

An online survey with questions about preferences for mental health support and patient-reported outcome measures (Patient Health Questionnaire-9 [PHQ-9], Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7 [GAD-7], and Kidney Disease QOL Instrument-36 [KDQOL-36]).

METHODS

To address objectives 1 and 2, we conducted chi-square tests (for discrete variables) and tests (for continuous variables) to compare the distributions of the above measures for two groups: Albertans receiving dialysis who would engage or would not engage in support for mental health. We subsequently conducted a series of binary logistic regressions guided by the purposeful variable selection approach to identify a subset of the most relevant explanatory variables for determining whether or not people are more likely to engage in support for mental health (objective 3). To further explain differences between the two groups, we analyzed open-text comments following a summative content analysis approach.

RESULTS

Among 384 respondents, 72 did not provide a dialysis modality or answer the PHQ-9. The final data set included responses from 312 participants. Of these, 59.6% would consider engaging in support, including discussing medication with a family doctor (72.1%) or nephrologist (62.9%), peer support groups (64.9%), and talk therapy (60%). Phone was slightly favored (73%) over in person at dialysis (67.6%), outpatient (67.2%), or video (59.4%). Moderate to severe depressive symptoms (PHQ-9 score ≥10) was reported by 33.4%, and most respondents (63.9%) reported minimal anxiety symptoms; 36.1% reported mild to severe anxiety symptoms (GAD-7 score ≥5). The mean (SD) PHQ-9 score was 8.9 (6.4) for those who would engage in support, and lower at 5.8 (4.8) for those who would not. The mean (SD) GAD-7 score was 5.2 (5.6) for those who would engage in support and 2.8 (4.1) for those who would not. In the final logistic regression model, people who were unable to work had 2 times the odds of engaging in support than people who are able to work. People were also more likely to engage in support if they had been on dialysis for fewer years and had lower (worse) mental health scores (odds ratios = 1.06 and 1.38, respectively). The final model explained 15.5% (Nagelkerke R) of the variance and with 66.6% correct classification. We analyzed 146 comments in response to the question, "Is there anything else you like to tell us." The top 2 categories for both groups were QOL and impact of dialysis environment. The third category differed: those who would engage wrote about support, whereas those who would not engage wrote about "dialysis is the least of my worries."

LIMITATIONS

A low response rate of 12.9% limits representativeness; people who chose not to participate may have different experiences of mental health.

CONCLUSIONS

Incorporating patients' preferences and willingness to engage in support for mental health will inform future visioning for person-centered mental health care in dialysis.

摘要

背景

据报告,接受透析的成年人中抑郁症和焦虑症的发病率较高(分别为40%和11%-52%),而在所有加拿大人中这一比例约为10%。透析护理中的心理健康问题未得到充分认识和治疗。

目的

(1)描述接受透析的艾伯塔省人对心理健康支持的偏好;(2)比较愿意或不愿意接受心理健康支持的人群的抑郁、焦虑和生活质量(QOL)领域;(3)探索社会人口统计学、心理健康和QOL领域,以解释人们是否愿意接受心理健康支持。

设计

横断面调查。

地点

加拿大艾伯塔省。

患者

接受各种透析方式的成年人(N = 2972)。

测量

一项在线调查,包括有关心理健康支持偏好的问题以及患者报告的结局指标(患者健康问卷-9 [PHQ-9]、广泛性焦虑症-7 [GAD-7]和肾病生活质量量表-36 [KDQOL-36])。

方法

为实现目标1和2,我们进行了卡方检验(用于离散变量)和t检验(用于连续变量),以比较两组接受透析的艾伯塔省人的上述指标分布:愿意或不愿意接受心理健康支持的人群。随后,我们采用有目的的变量选择方法进行了一系列二元逻辑回归,以确定一组最相关的解释变量,用于确定人们是否更有可能接受心理健康支持(目标3)。为进一步解释两组之间的差异,我们采用汇总内容分析方法分析了开放式文本评论。

结果

在384名受访者中,72人未提供透析方式或未回答PHQ-9。最终数据集包括312名参与者的回复。其中,59.6%的人会考虑接受支持,包括与家庭医生(72.1%)或肾病专家(62.9%)讨论药物治疗、同伴支持小组(64.9%)和谈话疗法(60%)。与在透析中心面对面(67.6%)、门诊(67.2%)或视频(59.4%)相比,电话咨询略受青睐(73%)。33.4%的人报告有中度至重度抑郁症状(PHQ-9评分≥10),大多数受访者(63.9%)报告焦虑症状轻微;36.1%的人报告有轻度至重度焦虑症状(GAD-7评分≥5)。愿意接受支持的人的平均(SD)PHQ-9评分为8.9(6.4),不愿意接受支持的人则较低,为5.8(4.8)。愿意接受支持的人的平均(SD)GAD-7评分为5.2(5.6),不愿意接受支持的人则为2.8(4.1)。在最终的逻辑回归模型中,无法工作的人接受支持的可能性是能够工作的人的2倍。透析时间较短且心理健康评分较低(较差)的人也更有可能接受支持(优势比分别为1.06和1.38)。最终模型解释了15.5%(Nagelkerke R)的方差,正确分类率为66.6%。我们分析了146条针对“你还有其他想告诉我们的吗”这一问题的评论。两组的前两大类别都是生活质量和透析环境的影响。第三类别有所不同:愿意接受支持的人写的是支持方面的内容,而不愿意接受支持的人写的是“透析是我最不用担心的”。

局限性

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/f295/9421011/6d76a586a199/10.1177_20543581221118436-fig1.jpg

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