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Healthcare decision-making in end stage renal disease-patient preferences and clinical correlates.


ABSTRACT:

Background

Medical decision-making is critical to patient survival and well-being. Patients with end stage renal disease (ESRD) are faced with incrementally complex decision-making throughout their treatment journey. The extent to which patients seek involvement in the decision-making process and factors which influence these in ESRD need to be understood.

Methods

535 ESRD patients were enrolled into the cross-sectional study arm and 30 patients who started dialysis were prospectively evaluated. Patients were enrolled into 3 groups- 'predialysis' (group A), 'in-centre' haemodialysis (HD) (group B) and self-care HD (93 % at home-group C) from across five tertiary UK renal centres. The Autonomy Preference Index (API) has been employed to study patient preferences for information-seeking (IS) and decision-making (DM). Demographic, psychosocial and neuropsychometric assessments are considered for analyses.

Results

458 complete responses were available. API items have high internal consistency in the study population (Cronbach's alpha?>?0.70). Overall and across individual study groups, the scores for information-seeking and decision-making are significantly different indicating that although patients had a strong preference to be well informed, they were more neutral in their preference to participate in DM (p??70: and low DM (?30) scores. This shows association of higher DM scores with lower age, lower comorbidity index score, higher executive brain function, belonging in the self-caring cohort and being unemployed. In the prospectively studied cohort of predialysis patients, there was no change in decision-making preference scores after commencement of dialysis.

Conclusion

ESRD patients prefer to receive information, but this does not always imply active involvement in decision-making. By understanding modifiable and non-modifiable factors which affect patient preferences for involvement in healthcare decision-making, health professionals may acknowledge the need to accommodate individual patient preferences to the extent determined by the individual patient factors.

SUBMITTER: Jayanti A 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4647276 | biostudies-literature | 2015 Nov

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Publications

Healthcare decision-making in end stage renal disease-patient preferences and clinical correlates.

Jayanti Anuradha A   Neuvonen Markus M   Wearden Alison A   Morris Julie J   Foden Philip P   Brenchley Paul P   Mitra Sandip S  

BMC nephrology 20151114


<h4>Background</h4>Medical decision-making is critical to patient survival and well-being. Patients with end stage renal disease (ESRD) are faced with incrementally complex decision-making throughout their treatment journey. The extent to which patients seek involvement in the decision-making process and factors which influence these in ESRD need to be understood.<h4>Methods</h4>535 ESRD patients were enrolled into the cross-sectional study arm and 30 patients who started dialysis were prospecti  ...[more]

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