Wright Nunes Julie, Kerr Eve, Ojo Akinlolu, Powell Corey, Fan Audrey, Brinley F John, Devine Anita, Ellies Tammy, Grzyb Katie, Garcia-Guzman Luis, Nakai Tejpreet, Oliverio Andrea, Chen Emily, Fagerlin Angela
Internal Medicine, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Internal Medicine, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Am J Kidney Dis. 2025 Mar;85(3):284-292. doi: 10.1053/j.ajkd.2024.10.005. Epub 2024 Dec 14.
RATIONALE & OBJECTIVE: Chronic kidney disease (CKD) affects millions of people in the United States, yet effective interventions to address gaps in patient knowledge and engagement are not well-established. We developed and pilot tested a brief educational decision aid for patients with CKD who are being treated in primary care settings.
Pilot quality improvement (QI) study of a decision aid intervention.
SETTING & PARTICIPANTS: The decision aid was introduced and used in 1 of 2 general internal medicine primary care clinics for adult patients with CKD.
An electronic medical record-based patient educational decision aid called the Encounter Decision Intervention (EDI) developed using QI methods and with input from patients and clinicians for use during primary care visits to address a CKD diagnosis and engage patients in their clinical management.
Perceived and objective CKD knowledge, CKD-specific stress, and patient satisfaction measured in both primary care clinics as assessed using validated surveys.
Fisher exact tests, t tests, and Kruskal-Wallis tests were used to detect univariable associations of outcomes with use of the EDI across primary care clinics.
Seventy-four patients completed the study (37 in each clinic). There were no statistically significant differences in patient characteristics between the clinics. The group treated in the clinic that used the EDI had statistically significantly higher satisfaction with their clinicians, with clinician communication, and with their overall care. The patients reported high satisfaction with the EDI, and the clinicians reported favorable usability.
A nonrandomized comparison, small sample size, and possible differences across practice settings.
A new integrated educational decision aid was successfully implemented in a primary care setting. Pilot testing suggested that the EDI was associated with higher patient satisfaction with their primary care provider, with their clinician's communication, and with their overall care.
PLAIN-LANGUAGE SUMMARY: Most patients who have chronic kidney disease (CKD) are not aware of their illness. Few studies have explored whether patient education can increase patients' knowledge about CKD or influence patients' satisfaction with the care or communication they receive from their physicians. This study tested whether a short CKD education intervention implemented by the patient's physician was associated with patients' greater awareness of their CKD as well as their satisfaction with care and communication. This pilot study found that a decision aid for patients with CKD was implementable in a primary care setting. Patients who received CKD education felt more satisfied with their care and communication with their physicians compared with patients who did not receive the education.
慢性肾脏病(CKD)在美国影响着数百万人,但针对患者知识和参与度差距的有效干预措施尚未完全确立。我们开发并进行了初步测试,为在初级保健机构接受治疗的CKD患者设计了一种简短的教育决策辅助工具。
决策辅助干预的初步质量改进(QI)研究。
该决策辅助工具在两家成人CKD患者普通内科初级保健诊所中的一家引入并使用。
一种基于电子病历的患者教育决策辅助工具,称为“会诊决策干预(EDI)”,采用QI方法开发,并在患者和临床医生的参与下用于初级保健就诊期间,以应对CKD诊断并促使患者参与其临床管理。
使用经过验证的调查评估两家初级保健诊所中患者的CKD知识认知度和客观水平、CKD特异性压力以及患者满意度。
采用Fisher精确检验、t检验和Kruskal-Wallis检验来检测各初级保健诊所中使用EDI与结果之间的单变量关联。
74名患者完成了研究(每家诊所37名)。两家诊所患者的特征在统计学上无显著差异。在使用EDI的诊所接受治疗的组对其临床医生、医生沟通以及整体护理的满意度在统计学上显著更高。患者对EDI的满意度较高,临床医生也报告其可用性良好。
非随机对照、样本量小以及不同医疗机构之间可能存在差异。
一种新的综合教育决策辅助工具在初级保健机构中成功实施。初步测试表明,EDI与患者对初级保健提供者、医生沟通以及整体护理的更高满意度相关。
大多数患有慢性肾脏病(CKD)的患者并不知晓自己的病情。很少有研究探讨患者教育是否能增加患者对CKD的了解,或影响患者对所接受护理及与医生沟通的满意度。本研究测试了由患者医生实施的简短CKD教育干预是否与患者对CKD的更高认知度以及对护理和沟通的满意度相关。这项初步研究发现,针对CKD患者的决策辅助工具在初级保健机构中是可行的。与未接受教育的患者相比,接受CKD教育的患者对其护理和与医生的沟通更满意。