| Literature DB >> 26169052 |
Andrew S Allegretti1, Gregory Hundemer2, Rajeev Chorghade3, Katherine Cosgrove4, Ednan Bajwa5, Ishir Bhan6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recent studies suggest discrepancies between patients and providers around perceptions of hemodialysis prognosis. Such data are lacking for continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT). We aim to assess patient and provider understanding of outcomes around CRRT.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26169052 PMCID: PMC4501124 DOI: 10.1186/s12882-015-0086-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nephrol ISSN: 1471-2369 Impact factor: 2.388
Survey – Subjects were asked one open-ended question (question 1, patient/HCP only) and five multiple-choice questions (questions 1–6)
| Number | Question | Response |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | What is your understanding of this machine’s purpose? | Open Ended |
| Patient/HCP only | ||
| 2 | CRRT is a procedure done on patients who have kidney failure where a machine replaces the job of the kidneys. | True or False |
| Correct Answer: True | ||
| Patient/HCP only | ||
| 3 | CRRT helps the kidneys heal faster | True or False |
| Correct Answer: False | ||
| Patient/HCP only | ||
| 4 | How many patients who are treated with CRRT in the intensive care unit will need to be on dialysis forever after leaving the hospital? | Multiple Choice |
| Choices: <25 %, 25-49 %, 50-75 %, ≥ 75 % | ||
| 5 | How many patients who are treated with CRRT in the intensive care unit will survive and leave the hospital? | Multiple Choice |
| Choices: <25 %, 25-49 %, 50-75 %, ≥ 75 % | ||
| 6 |
| Multiple Choice |
|
| Choices: Completely, mostly, a little, not at all |
Demographics
| Patient/HCP Demographics | |
|---|---|
| Age, mean (range, standard deviation) | 56 years (35–90 years, 14) |
| Patient (n = 4/32) | 61 years (35–90 years, 14) |
| HCP (n = 28/32) | 55 years (33–80 years, 14) |
| Male Gender | 21 (66 %) |
| Reason for CRRT | |
| AKI | 25 (78 %) |
| ESRD | 7 (22 %) |
| Race | |
| White | 23 (72 %) |
| Black | 4 (13 %) |
| Non-black Hispanic | 3 (9 %) |
| Other | 2 (6 %) |
| Highest Level of Education | |
| Did not complete high school | 1 (3 %) |
| Completed high school | 11 (34 %) |
| Partial college | 6 (19 %) |
| Completed college | 10 (31 %) |
| Post-graduate | 4 (13 %) |
| Patient Location | |
| Medical ICU | 23 (72 %) |
| Cardiac ICU | 9 (28 %) |
| Primary Diagnosis | |
| Sepsis/Infection | 12 (38 %) |
| Cardiogenic Shock | 5 (16 %) |
| Liver disease/Cirrhosis | 5 (16 %) |
| Pancreatitis | 2 (6 %) |
| Hemorrhagic Shock | 2 (6 %) |
| Other | 6 (19 %) |
| Survived to Discharge (Patients) | 18 (56 %) |
| Recovered Renal Function (of n = 15 AKI patients who survived to discharge) | 12 (80 %) |
| Level of Training of MDs | |
| Attending | 7 (22 %) |
| Fellow | 4 (13 %) |
| Resident | 21 (66 %) |
| Post graduate year (PGY) 1 | 3 (9 %) |
| PGY 2 | 9 (28 %) |
| PGY 3 or 4 | 9 (28 %) |
All data for patient/HCP categories correspond to the survey responder unless otherwise noted
Fig. 1Perceptions of CRRT outcomes. Patients and/or health care proxies (HCP) were more likely to overestimate survival following continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT) and had a more positive view on provider/patient communication than physicians or nurses