Centre for Kidney Research, The Children's Hospital at Westmead, Sydney, Australia.
Centre for Kidney Research, The Children's Hospital at Westmead, Sydney, Australia; Sydney School of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
Am J Kidney Dis. 2024 Feb;83(2):139-150.e1. doi: 10.1053/j.ajkd.2023.07.014. Epub 2023 Sep 18.
RATIONALE & OBJECTIVE: Indigenous People suffer a high burden of kidney disease. Those receiving maintenance dialysis have worse outcomes compared with similarly treated non-Indigenous patients. We characterized the experiences of Indigenous patients receiving dialysis in British-colonized countries to gain insights into which aspects of kidney care may benefit from improvement.
A systematic review of published qualitative interview studies.
SETTING & STUDY POPULATIONS: Indigenous Peoples aged 18 years and over, receiving hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis in British-colonized countries.
Search terms for Indigenous Peoples, dialysis, and qualitative research were entered into Medline, Embase, PsycINFO, and CINAHL and searched from inception to January 5, 2023.
Characteristics of each study were extracted into Microsoft Excel for quality assessment.
Data were analyzed using thematic synthesis.
The analysis included 28 studies involving 471 participants from Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and the United States. We identified four themes: centrality of family and culture (continuing dialysis for family, gaining autonomy through shared involvement, balancing primary responsibility to care for family); marginalization due to structural and social inequities (falling through gaps in primary care intensifying shock, discriminated against and judged by specialists, alienated and fearful of hospitals, overwhelmed by travel, financial and regimental burdens); vulnerability in accessing health care (need for culturally responsive care, lack of language interpreters, without agency in decision-making, comorbidities compounding complexity of self-management); and distress from separation from community (disenfranchisement and sorrow when away for dialysis, inability to perpetuate cultural continuity, seeking a kidney transplant).
We only included articles published in English.
Indigenous patients receiving dialysis experience inequities in health care that compound existing accessibility issues caused by colonization. Improving the accessibility and cultural responsiveness of dialysis and kidney transplant services in collaboration with Indigenous stakeholders holds promise to enhance the experience of Indigenous patients receiving dialysis.
PLAIN-LANGUAGE SUMMARY: Worldwide Indigenous populations suffer a high incidence of chronic disease leading to lower life expectancy, particularly for kidney disease, an insidious condition requiring long-term dialysis treatment. By listening to Indigenous dialysis patients' stories, we hoped to understand how to improve their experience. We gathered 28 qualitative research studies from four countries reporting Indigenous adults' experiences of dialysis. They described lacking awareness of kidney disease, poor access to health services, systemic racism, inadequate cultural safety, and being dislocated from family, community, and culture. These findings indicate that respectful collaboration with Indigenous Peoples to craft and implement policy changes holds promise to improve prevention, integrate culturally responsive health care practices, and provide better access to local dialysis services and opportunities for kidney transplants.
原住民患有肾脏疾病的负担很重。与接受同样治疗的非原住民患者相比,接受维持性透析的患者预后更差。我们对在英国殖民国家接受透析治疗的原住民患者的经历进行了描述,以了解肾脏护理的哪些方面可能需要改进。
对已发表的定性访谈研究进行系统综述。
18 岁及以上在英国殖民国家接受血液透析或腹膜透析的原住民。
将原住民、透析和定性研究的检索词输入 Medline、Embase、PsycINFO 和 CINAHL,并从创建到 2023 年 1 月 5 日进行检索。
将每项研究的特征提取到 Microsoft Excel 中进行质量评估。
使用主题合成法对数据进行分析。
该分析纳入了来自澳大利亚、新西兰、加拿大和美国的 28 项研究,共涉及 471 名参与者。我们确定了四个主题:家庭和文化的核心地位(为家庭继续透析,通过共同参与获得自主权,平衡主要照顾家庭的责任);由于结构和社会不平等而导致的边缘化(初级保健中的差距导致病情恶化,受到专家的歧视和评判,与医院疏远和恐惧,旅行、经济和规章制度负担过重);获得医疗保健的脆弱性(需要文化响应式护理,缺乏语言翻译,在决策中没有代理,合并自我管理的复杂性);与社区分离引起的痛苦(因透析而被剥夺权利和悲伤,无法延续文化连续性,寻求肾移植)。
我们只纳入了发表在英语期刊上的文章。
接受透析治疗的原住民在医疗保健方面存在不平等现象,这加剧了殖民化导致的现有可及性问题。与原住民利益相关者合作,改善透析和肾移植服务的可及性和文化适应性,有望改善接受透析治疗的原住民患者的体验。