| Literature DB >> 29632702 |
Hala H Sa'adeh1, Razan N Darwazeh1, Amani A Khalil2, Sa'ed H Zyoud3,4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hypertension is the second most common cause of chronic kidney disease (CKD). Therefore, the aims of the study were to assess the knowledge, attitudes and practices (KAP) of hypertensive patients towards prevention and early detection of CKD, and to determine the clinical and socio-demographic factors, which affect the KAP regarding prevention of CKD.Entities:
Keywords: CKD screening index; Chronic kidney disease; Hypertension; Palestine
Year: 2018 PMID: 29632702 PMCID: PMC5885300 DOI: 10.1186/s40885-018-0091-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Hypertens ISSN: 2056-5909
Characteristics of 374 patients with hypertension
| Variable | Total |
|---|---|
| Gender | |
| Male | 131 (35) |
| Female | 243 (65) |
| Age (years) | |
| < 65 | 247 (66) |
| ≥ 65 | 127 (34) |
| Residency | |
| Village | 56 (15) |
| City | 301 (80.5) |
| Refugee camp | 17 (4.5) |
| Employment | |
| Employed | 98 (26.2) |
| Unemployed | 276 (73.8) |
| Body Mass Index | |
| Normal | 38 (10.2) |
| Overweight | 134 (35.8) |
| Obese | 202 (54) |
| Marital status | |
| Married | 296 (79.1) |
| Unmarried | 78 (20.9) |
| Monthly income (NISa) | |
| Low (Less than 2000) | 230 (61.5) |
| Moderate (2000–5000) | 129 (34.5) |
| High (More than 5000) | 15 (4) |
| Education Level | |
| Uneducated | 22 (5.9) |
| Primary school | 90 (24.1) |
| High school | 188 (50.3) |
| University | 74 (19.8) |
| Hypertension Duration | |
| < 1 year | 13 (3.5) |
| 1–3 years | 93 (24.9) |
| 4–5 years | 69 (18.4) |
| ≥ 5 years | 199 (53.2) |
| Therapy type | |
| Mono therapy | 174 (46.5) |
| Multi therapy | 200 (53.5) |
| Total number of chronic diseases other than hypertension | |
| 0 | 79 (21.1) |
| 1 | 82 (21.9) |
| 2 | 144 (38.5) |
| 3 | 54 (14.4) |
| ≥ 4 | 15 (4.1) |
| Total number of medications | |
| < 4 | 125 (33.4) |
| ≥ 4 | 249 (66.6) |
a1 new Israeli shekel (NIS) equals 0.279 US Dollar
Median knowledge score towards prevention of chronic kidney disease of 374 patients with hypertension
| Variables | Total | Median knowledge scorea | Mean rank | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | ||||
| Male | 131 (35%) | 20 [16–23] | 186.3 | 0.877c |
| Female | 243 (65%) | 19 [15–23] | 188.1 | |
| Age (years) | ||||
| < 65 | 247 (66) | 20 [16–23] | 201.1 |
|
| ≥ 65 | 127 (34) | 19 [14–21] | 161.1 | |
| Residency | ||||
| Village | 56 (15%) | 20 [15–24] | 187.5 | |
| City | 301 (80.5%) | 19 [16–23] | 185.5 | 0.056d |
| Refugee camp | 17 (4.5%) | 22 [18–24] | 223.9 | |
| Employment | ||||
| Employed | 98 (26.2%) | 21 [16–24] | 198.2 | 0.252c |
| Unemployed | 276 (73.8%) | 19 [16–23] | 183.7 | |
| Body Mass Index | ||||
| Normal | 38 (10.2%) | 22 [17–24] | 212.5 | |
| Overweight | 134 (35.8%) | 18 [14–21] | 155.2 |
|
| Obese | 202 (54%) | 21 [17–23] | 204.3 | |
| Marital status | ||||
| Married | 296 (79.1%) | 20 [16–23] | 184.9 | 0.807c |
| Unmarried | 78 (20.9%) | 20 [13–23] | 188.2 | |
| Monthly income (NIS e) | ||||
| Low (Less than 2000] | 230 (61.5%) | 19 [15–23] | 180.9 | |
| Moderate (2000–5000) | 129 (34.5%) | 20 [16–23] | 194.9 | 0.669d |
| High (More than 5000) | 15 (4%) | 22 [18–23] | 225.1 | |
| Education Level | ||||
| Uneducated | 22 (5.9) | 19 [10–21] | 140.6 | |
| Primary school | 90 (24.1) | 17 [12–22] | 157.7 |
|
| High school | 188 (50.3) | 20 [17–23] | 195.4 | |
| University | 74 (19.8) | 21 [18–24] | 217.6 | |
| Hypertension Duration (year) | ||||
| < 1 | 13 (3.5%) | 21 [18–23] | 200.7 | |
| 1–3 | 93 (24.9%) | 20 [15–23] | 180.1 | 0.538d |
| 4–5 | 69 (18.4%) | 18 [15–23] | 176.0 | |
| ≥ 5 | 199 (53.2%) | 20 [16–23] | 194.1 | |
| Therapy type | ||||
| Mono therapy | 174 (46.5%) | 20 [15–23] | 183.9 | 0.549c |
| Multi therapy | 200 (53.5%) | 20 [16–23] | 190.6 | |
| Total number of medications | ||||
| < 4 | 125 (33.4) | 20 [16–22] | 169.2 |
|
| ≥ 4 | 249 (66.6) | 20 [15–23] | 196.7 | |
| Total number of comorbid diseases | ||||
| 0 | 79 (21.1%) | 20 [16–23] | 190.9 | |
| 1 | 82 (21.9%) | 20 [15–23] | 183.4 | |
| 2 | 144 (38.5%) | 20 [17–24] | 196.8 | 0.446d |
| 3 | 54 (14.4%) | 19 [14–23] | 173.7 | |
| ≥ 4 | 15 (4.1%) | 17 [13–21] | 152.6 | |
aKnowledge scale was a dichotomous scale of 30 items (range 0–30, high score meaning more correct and better knowledge)
bThe p-values are bold where they are less than the significance level cut-off of 0.05
cStatistical significance of differences calculated using the Mann-Whitney U test
dStatistical significance of differences calculated using the Kruskal-Wallis test
e1 new Israeli shekel (NIS) equals 0.279 US Dollar
Patients characteristics associated with knowledge score regarding prevention chronic kidney disease among hypertensive patients in multiple linear regression
| Variablesa | Unstandardised coefficients (B) | Standardised coefficients (Beta) | 95% Confidence interval for B | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years)c | ||||
| < 65 | Ref. |
| ||
| ≥ 65 | −2.244 | −0.181 | −3.493 to −0.995 | |
| BMIc | ||||
| Normal weight | Ref. | 0.411 | ||
| Overweight or obese | −0.813 | − 0.042 | −2.753 to 1.127 | |
| Education levelc | ||||
| Below university education level | Ref. |
| ||
| University education level | 1.989 | 0.135 | 0.506 to 3.473 | |
| Total number of medicationsc | ||||
| < 4 | Ref. | 0.474 | ||
| ≥ 4 | 0.458 | 0.037 | −0.799 to 1.714 | |
aUnivariate factors with p values < 0.05 were entered into the multiple linear regression
bThe p-values are bold where they are less than the significance level cut-off of 0.05
cNominal variables were entered into analyses using dummy coding
Median attitude score towards prevention of chronic kidney disease of 374 patients with hypertension
| Variables | Total | Median attitude scorea | Mean rank | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | ||||
| Male | 131 (35%) | 70 [66–72] | 202.0 | 0.056c |
| Female | 243 (65%) | 68 [64–72] | 179.7 | |
| Age (years) | ||||
| < 65 | 247 (66) | 69 [66–72] | 203.6 | |
| ≥ 65 | 127 (34) | 67 [62–71] | 156.3 |
|
| Residency | ||||
| Village | 56 (15%) | 69 [64–71] | 184.2 | |
| City | 301 (80.5%) | 69 [65–72] | 189.3 | 0.678d |
| Refugee camp | 17 (4.5%) | 68 [63–72] | 166.5 | |
| Employment | ||||
| Employed | 98 (26.2%) | 70 [67–73] | 218.2 |
|
| Unemployed | 276 (73.8%) | 68 [64–72] | 176.6 | |
| Body Mass Index | ||||
| Normal | 38 (10.2%) | 69 [66–73] | 196.6 | |
| Overweight | 134 (35.8%) | 69 [64–72] | 184.9 | 0.841d |
| Obese | 202 (54%) | 68 [65–72] | 187.5 | |
| Marital status | ||||
| Married | 296 (79.1%) | 69 [65–72] | 162.8 |
|
| Unmarried | 78 (20.9%) | 67 [62–72] | 194.0 | |
| Monthly income (NISe) | ||||
| Low (Less than 2000) | 230 (61.5%) | 67 [63–71] | 163.5 | |
| Moderate (2000–5000) | 129 (34.5%) | 70 [67–74] | 223.2 |
|
| High (More than 5000) | 15 (4%) | 73 [69–75] | 248.0 | |
| Education Level | ||||
| Uneducated | 22 (5.9%) | 63 [60–68] | 90.4 | |
| Primary school | 90 (24.1%) | 66 [62–70] | 137.7 |
|
| High school | 188 (50.3%) | 69 [66–72] | 200.6 | |
| University | 74 (19.8%) | 71 [68–74] | 243.2 | |
| Hypertension Duration (year) | ||||
| < 1 | 13 (3.5%) | 70 [67–73] | 208.2 | |
| 1–3 | 93 (24.9%) | 68 [65–72] | 180.1 | |
| 4–5 | 69 (18.4%) | 68 [64–72] | 176.8 | 0.537d |
| ≥ 5 | 199 (53.2%) | 69 [65–72] | 193.3 | |
| Therapy type | ||||
| Mono therapy | 174 (46.5%) | 68 [65–72] | 184.8 | 0.655c |
| Multi therapy | 200 (53.5%) | 69 [65–72] | 189.8 | |
| Total number of medications | ||||
| < 4 | 125 (33.4) | 68 [65–71] | 181.4 | 0.442c |
| ≥ 4 | 249 (66.6) | 69 [65–72] | 190.5 | |
| Total number of comorbid diseases | ||||
| 0 | 79 (21.1%) | 69 [66–73] | 200.8 | |
| 1 | 82 (21.9%) | 68 [66–72] | 194.1 | |
| 2 | 144 (38.5%) | 69 [65–72] | 182.2 | 0.611d |
| 3 | 54 (14.4%) | 67 [62–73] | 175.1 | |
| ≥ 4 | 15 (4.1%) | 69 [63–70] | 177.1 | |
aAttitude scale used 5-point Likert-type scale for 18 items (range 18–90, high score meaning more positive and better attitudes)
bThe p-values are bold where they are less than the significance level cut-off of 0.05
cStatistical significance of differences calculated using the Mann-Whitney U test
dStatistical significance of differences calculated using the Kruskal-Wallis test
e1 new Israeli shekel (NIS) equals 0.279 US Dollar
Patients characteristics associated with attitude score regarding prevention chronic kidney disease among hypertensive patients in multiple linear regression
| Variablesa | Unstandardised coefficients (B) | Standardised coefficients (Beta) | 95% Confidence interval for B | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | ||||
| < 65 | Ref. |
| ||
| ≥ 65 | −1.517 | −0.130 | −2.612 to −0.421 | |
| Employment | ||||
| Employed | Ref. | 0.794 | ||
| Unemployed | −0.161 | − 0.013 | −1.370 to 1.049 | |
| Marital status | ||||
| Married | Ref. | 0.370 | ||
| Unmarried | 0.575 | 0.042 | −0.685 to 1.834 | |
| Monthly incomec | ||||
| Low income | Ref. |
| ||
| Moderate to high income | 1.769 | 0.156 | 0.546 to 2.992 | |
| Education levelc | ||||
| Below university education level | Ref. | 0.054 | ||
| University education level | 1.433 | 0.104 | −0.025 to 2.890 | |
| Knowledge scored | ||||
| Continuous | 0.343 | 0.365 |
| 0.258 to 0.428 |
aUnivariate factors with p values < 0.05 were entered into the multiple linear regression
bThe p-values are bold where they are less than the significance level cut-off of 0.05
cNominal variables were entered into analyses using dummy coding
dKnowledge scale was a dichotomous scale of 30 items (range 0–30, high score meaning more correct and better knowledge)
Median practice score towards prevention of chronic kidney disease of 374 patients with hypertension
| Variables | Total | Median practice scorea | Mean rank | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | ||||
| Male | 131 (35) | 40 [37–43) | 208.9 |
|
| Female | 243 (65) | 39 [35–42] | 176.0 | |
| Age (years) | ||||
| < 65 | 247 (66) | 39 [36–42] | 183.7 | 0.339c |
| ≥ 65 | 127 (34) | 40 [36–43] | 194.9 | |
| Residency | ||||
| Village | 56 (15) | 40 [37–43] | 199.6 | |
| City | 301 (80.5) | 39 [36–42] | 183.9 | 0.384d |
| Refugee camp | 17 (4.5) | 42 [36–43] | 211.8 | |
| Employment | ||||
| Employed | 98 (26.2) | 40 [36.8–43] | 195.7 | 0.383c |
| Unemployed | 276 (73.8) | 39 [36–42] | 184.6 | |
| Body Mass Index | ||||
| Normal | 38 (10.2) | 41.5 [37–44] | 226.0 | |
| Overweight | 134 (35.8) | 40 [36–42] | 191.3 |
|
| Obese | 202 (54) | 39 [35–42] | 177.8 | |
| Marital status | ||||
| Married | 296 (79.1) | 40 [36–42] | 171.4 | 0.138c |
| Unmarried | 78 (20.9) | 38 [34–42] | 191.7 | |
| Monthly income (NISe) | ||||
| Low (Less than 2000) | 230 (61.5) | 39 [36–42] | 176.8 | |
| Moderate (2000–5000) | 129 (34.5) | 40 [36–43] | 200.3 |
|
| High (More than 5000) | 15 (4) | 42 [38–44] | 241.5 | |
| Education Level | ||||
| Uneducated | 22 (5.9) | 37 [34–40.5] | 148.9 | |
| Primary school | 90 (24.1) | 37 [34–41] | 146.6 |
|
| High school | 188 (50.3) | 40 [37–43] | 202.1 | |
| University | 74 (19.8) | 40 [37–43] | 211.7 | |
| Hypertension Duration (year) | ||||
| < 1 | 13 (3.5) | 40 [33.5–42.5] | 178.4 | |
| 1–3 | 93 (24.9) | 39 [36–42] | 183.5 | 0.924d |
| 4–5 | 69 (18.4) | 39 [35–43] | 184.7 | |
| ≥ 5 | 199 (53.2) | 40 [36–42] | 191.0 | |
| Therapy type | ||||
| Mono therapy | 174 (46.5) | 39 [35–42] | 176.5 | 0.065c |
| Multi therapy | 200 (53.5) | 40 [36–43] | 197.1 | |
| Total number of medications | ||||
| < 4 | 125 (33.4) | 39 [35–42] | 169.2 | |
| ≥ 4 | 249 (66.6) | 40 [26–43] | 196.7 |
|
| Total number of comorbid diseases | ||||
| 0 | 79 (21.1) | 39 [35–42] | 183.1 | |
| 1 | 82 (21.9) | 38 [35–42] | 165.1 | |
| 2 | 144 (38.5) | 40 [36–43] | 190.6 |
|
| 3 | 54 (14.4) | 40 [37–43] | 205.1 | |
| ≥ 4 | 15 (4.1) | 42 [38–44] | 240.1 | |
aThe practices scale was made up of 12 items that recorded each patient’s healthy practices towards the prevention of CKD. The practice score ranged from 12 to 48 (high score meaning more good and better practices)
bThe p-values are bold where they are less than the significance level cut-off of 0.05
cStatistical significance of differences calculated using the Mann-Whitney U test
dStatistical significance of differences calculated using the Kruskal-Wallis test
e1 new Israeli shekel (NIS) equals 0.279 US Dollar
Patients characteristics associated with practice score regarding prevention chronic kidney disease among hypertensive patients in multiple linear regression
| Variablesa | Unstandardised coefficients (B) | Standardised coefficients (Beta) | 95% Confidence interval for B | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Genderc | ||||
| Male | Ref. | |||
| Female | −0.958 | − 0.102 |
| −1.907 to − 0.008 |
| BMIc | ||||
| Normal weight | Ref. | |||
| Overweight or obese | −1.617 | −0.110 |
| −3.040 to − 0.194 |
| Monthly incomec | ||||
| Low income | Ref. | |||
| Moderate to high income | 0.016 | 0.002 | 0.976 | −1.066 to 1.098 |
| Education levelc | ||||
| Below university education level | Ref. | |||
| University education level | 0.210 | 0.019 | 0.745 | −1.061 to 1.481 |
| Total number of medicationc | ||||
| < 4 | Ref. | |||
| ≥ 4 | 0.734 | 0.077 | 0.195 | −0.378 to 1.847 |
| Total number of co-morbid diseasesc | ||||
| 0 | Ref. | |||
| ≥ 1 | 0.828 | 0.091 | 0.127 | −0.236 to- 1.893 |
| Knowledge scored | ||||
| Continuous | 0.136 | 0.178 |
| 0.056 to 0.217 |
| Attitude scoree | ||||
| Continuous | 0.164 | 0.200 |
| 0.074 to 0.253 |
aUnivariate factors with p values < 0.05 were entered into the multiple linear regression
bThe p-values are bold where they are less than the significance level cut-off of 0.05
cNominal variables were entered into analyses using dummy coding
dKnowledge scale was a dichotomous scale of 30 items (range 0–30, high score meaning more correct and better knowledge)
eAttitude scale used 5-point Likert-type scale for 18 items (range 18–90, high score meaning more positive and better attitude