| Literature DB >> 30089458 |
Amar D Bansal1, Nina R O'Connor2, David J Casarett3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Dialysis is often initiated in the hospital during episodes of acute kidney injury and critical illness. Little is known about how patients or their surrogate decision makers feel about dialysis initiation in the inpatient setting.Entities:
Keywords: Acute kidney injury; Continuous renal replacement therapy; Decisional capacity; Decisional satisfaction; Dialysis; Shared decision-making
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30089458 PMCID: PMC6083629 DOI: 10.1186/s12882-018-0987-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nephrol ISSN: 1471-2369 Impact factor: 2.388
Decision attitude scale and additional study questions. Responses were a 5-item Likert Scale (Strongly agree, agree, neutral, disagree, strongly disagree)
| Decision attitude scale | |
| I had no problem using the information | |
| I am comfortable with my decision | |
| The information was easy to understand | |
| I wish someone else had made the decision for me | |
| It was difficult to make a choice | |
| I am satisfied with my decision | |
| My decision is sound | |
| More information would help | |
| My decision is the right one for my situationa | |
| Consulting someone else would have been useful | |
| Additional study questions | |
| Signing the consent form was mainly to protect the hospital | |
| Signing the consent form was a waste of time | |
| I feel like I had a choice in making this decision | |
| Going through the process of consent for dialysis was important to me |
a This is the original wording of the Decision Attitude Scale (DAS). When the study participant was a surrogate decision-maker (as opposed to the patient), this statement was modified to read, “My decision is the right one for the situation”
Modified Control Preferences Scale. The original wording of the CPS can be found in reference [8]
| Option | Patient perception scale | Physician perception scale |
|---|---|---|
| A | I made the final decision about dialysis | The patient made the final decision about dialysis |
| B | I made the final decision about dialysis after seriously considering the kidney doctor’s opinion | The patient made the final decision about dialysis after seriously considering my opinion |
| C | The kidney doctor and I shared responsibility for deciding about initiating dialysis | I shared responsibility with the patient for making the final decision about dialysis |
| D | The kidney doctor made the final decision about dialysis but seriously considered my opinion | I made the final decision about dialysis after seriously considering the patient’s opinion |
| E | The kidney doctor made the final decision about dialysis | I made the final decision about dialysis |
Patient demographics
| Patient characteristics | Total cohort ( |
|---|---|
| Demographics | |
| Age: mean (SD), years | 63 (13) |
| Gender: | 15 (71) |
| African-American: | 7 (33) |
| Care delivery | |
| Surgical primary team: | 6 (29) |
| Medical history | |
| Hypertension: | 13 (62) |
| Diabetes: | 11 (52) |
| Baseline creatinine: | 2.3 (1.8) |
| Initial dialysis modality | |
| CVVHD: | 14 (67) |
| IHD: | 7 (33) |
| Mortality | |
| Overall In-hospital mortality: | 7 (33) |
| Hospice at discharge: | 1 (5) |
SD standard deviation, CVVHD continuous venovenous hemodialysis, SDM surrogate decision-maker, IHD intermittent hemodialysis
Mean decisional attitude score stratified by dialysis modality (a) and presence of an SDM (b)
| Mean DAS score with 95% CI | |
|---|---|
| a) Dialysis modality | |
| iHD ( | 3.9 (3.4–4.4) |
| CVVHD ( | 4.1 (3.8–4.5) |
| b) Surrogate decision maker | |
| Absent ( | 3.9 (3.4–4.3) |
| Present ( | 4.2 (3.8–4.6) |
DAS decisional attitude scale, CI confidence interval
Fig. 1Distribution of responses to Control Preferences Scale (21 pairs). All responses to Control Preferences Scale (CPS) by 21 paired sets of study participants and corresponding nephrology providers. The categories on the horizontal axis correspond to selections on the CPS, which is shown in Table 2. Choice A from the CPS corresponds to “Patient autonomous,” while choice E corresponds with “MD autonomous”
Fig. 2Distribution of concordant responses to Control Preferences Scale (9 pairs). Concordant responses refer to when a patient/SDM and nephrology provider chose the same response to the Control Preferences Scale. From the 21 paired sets, there were 9 concordant pairs, which are shown here