Bowman Jillian, Zhou Christina, Zasadzinski Lindsay, Zhu Mengqi, Saunders Milda R
Pritzker School of Medicine, University of Chicago Medicine, Chicago, IL.
Pediatrics, University of Chicago Medicine, Chicago, IL.
Kidney Med. 2025 Mar 12;7(5):100991. doi: 10.1016/j.xkme.2025.100991. eCollection 2025 May.
RATIONALE & OBJECTIVE: Higher chronic kidney disease (CKD) knowledge and health literacy (HL) are associated with improved CKD outcomes. We sought to determine if the CKD Report Card intervention increased CKD knowledge in patients regardless of HL level.
A block-randomized trial by clinic session.
SETTING & PARTICIPANTS: Patients with CKD 3 or above in an urban academic nephrology clinic.
The intervention group received the CKD Report Card, a 2-sided information sheet, before the clinic visit.
Kidney Knowledge Survey pre-post-visit score change.
Of 91 participants, the average age was 66.2 years, 64.8% identified as African American, 41.8% were male, and 11.0% had inadequate HL. The control group's (n = 53) mean pre-visit knowledge score was 55.8% with a post-pre-score change of 0.9 (95% confidence intervals [CI], -1.3 to 3.2). The intervention group's (n = 38) mean pre-visit score was 60.2% with a score change of 19.2 (95% CI, 15.2-23.3). The difference in score change between the control group and intervention group was -18.4 (95% CI, -22.6 to -14.1). In addition, there was no significant difference in knowledge gained by adequate and inadequate HL for the control group ( = 0.6) or the intervention group ( = 0.6). In the fully adjusted multivariable model, the HL × group interaction term was not significant (β = -6.1; = 0.4). Pre-visit score (β = -0.2; < 0.01) and intervention group (β = 19.0; < 0.001) were significant.
Limited generalizability because the study took place at 1 academic medical center and there were only a small proportion of patients with inadequate HL.
The CKD Report Card is a low-touch, low-cost intervention that improved CKD knowledge for all patients in our urban nephrology clinic regardless of HL level.
更高的慢性肾脏病(CKD)知识水平和健康素养(HL)与改善CKD结局相关。我们试图确定CKD报告卡干预措施是否能提高患者的CKD知识水平,无论其HL水平如何。
按门诊时段进行整群随机试验。
城市学术性肾脏病门诊中CKD 3期及以上的患者。
干预组在门诊就诊前收到一份双面信息单——CKD报告卡。
就诊前后肾脏知识调查得分的变化。
91名参与者的平均年龄为66.2岁,64.8%为非裔美国人,41.8%为男性,11.0%的健康素养不足。对照组(n = 53)就诊前的平均知识得分为55.8%,前后得分变化为0.9(95%置信区间[CI],-1.3至3.2)。干预组(n = 38)就诊前的平均得分为60.2%,得分变化为19.2(95% CI,15.2 - 23.3)。对照组和干预组得分变化的差异为-18.4(95% CI,-22.6至-14.1)。此外,对照组(P = 0.6)或干预组(P = 0.6)中,健康素养充足和不足的患者在知识获取方面无显著差异。在完全调整的多变量模型中,HL×组交互项不显著(β = -6.1;P = 0.4)。就诊前得分(β = -0.2;P < 0.01)和干预组(β = 19.0;P < 0.001)显著。
由于研究仅在1个学术医疗中心进行,且健康素养不足的患者比例较小,故推广性有限。
CKD报告卡是一种低接触、低成本的干预措施,可提高我们城市肾脏病门诊所有患者的CKD知识水平,无论其HL水平如何。