| Literature DB >> 34499133 |
Tessa K Novick1,2, Santiago Diaz2, Francisco Barrios2, Doris Cubas2, Kavyaa Choudhary3, Paul Nader1,2, Raymonda ElKhoury1,2, Lilia Cervantes4, Elizabeth A Jacobs2,5.
Abstract
Importance: In most states, undocumented Latinx immigrants with kidney failure receive dialysis in acute care settings on an emergency-only basis. How much kidney disease education Latinx immigrants receive and how to improve kidney disease education and outreach among Latinx populations are unknown. Objective: To understand the kidney disease educational gaps of Latinx individuals who need but lack access to scheduled outpatient dialysis. Design, Setting, and Participants: This qualitative study used semistructured interviews in a Texas hospital system from March 2020 to January 2021 with 15 individuals who received emergency-only dialysis when they were first diagnosed with kidney failure. Demographic information was collected, and a thematic analysis was performed using the constant comparative method on interviews after they were audio-recorded, translated, and transcribed verbatim. Data analysis was performed from April 2020 to February 2021. Main Outcomes and Measures: Subthemes and themes from semistructured interviews.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34499133 PMCID: PMC8430451 DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.24658
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JAMA Netw Open ISSN: 2574-3805
Participant Characteristics
| Characteristic | Participants, No. (%) (N = 15) |
|---|---|
| Interview length, mean (SD), min | 27 (12) |
| Age, mean (SD) | 51 (17) |
| Sex | |
| Male | 9 (60) |
| Female | 6 (40) |
| Identified as Hispanic | 15 (100) |
| Preferred interview in Spanish | 15 (100) |
| Birthplace | |
| Mexico | 11 (73) |
| Central America (Honduras, El Salvador) | 3 (20) |
| United States | 1 (7) |
| Unemployed | 15 (100) |
| Education level | |
| No School | 3 (20) |
| Less than high school | 7 (47) |
| High school | 4 (27) |
| More than high school | 1 (7) |
| Health insurance | |
| None | 1 (7) |
| Local safety-net insurance | 9 (60) |
| Other | 5 (33) |
| Other family member with kidney disease | 8 (53) |
| Cause of kidney disease | |
| Unknown | 4 (27) |
| Diabetes | 8 (53) |
| Hypertension | 2 (13) |
| Hypertension and diabetes | 1 (7) |
| When informed of kidney disease | |
| >6 mo before dialysis start | 0 |
| 0-6 mo before dialysis start | 9 (60) |
| Not informed prior to dialysis start | 6 (40) |
| Months on dialysis, mean (SD) | 9 (17) |
| Frequency of dialysis, presentations/mo, mean (SD) | 3 (1.2) |
| No. of people living at home, mean (SD) | 5 (3) |
| Housing instability | 4 (27) |
| Food insecurity | 4 (27) |
| Utility issues | 5 (33) |
| Transportation issues | 2 (13) |
Housing instability: a report of currently having a steady place to live but worried about losing it in the future, or currently not having a steady place to live.
Food insecurity: a report of sometimes or often not having enough food or money to buy more in the past 12 months.
Utility issues: a report of having the electric, gas, oil, or water company threaten to shut off services within the past 12 months.
Transportation issues: a report of lack of reliable transportation keeping them from medical appointments, meetings, work, or getting things needed for daily living in the past 12 months.
Themes and Subthemes With Illustrative Quotations
| Themes and subthemes | Summary and illustrative quotations |
|---|---|
| Theme 1: Lack of kidney disease awareness | Participants reported most education happened after they started dialysis, and that prior to developing symptoms of kidney failure, they were largely unaware they had kidney disease. |
| Dialysis was unexpected | “I came into the hospital with shortness of breath, nausea, dizziness, and I could barely really move my hands and feet … the next day the doctors told me that I had end-stage renal failure. It was really shocking to me because nobody had ever said anything about my kidneys before.” |
| “I didn’t know I had kidney issues … I started to feel a little fatigued and had quite a bit of coughing. When I entered the hospital, they didn’t let me go. It turned out … I had fluid in my lungs because of my kidneys… the same day they put a catheter in me for dialysis.” | |
| Missed opportunity for prevention | “As [Hispanic people], we don’t understand it, if they say, this is harmful, don’t do it, we don’t understand. Maybe we let things happen and then we have consequences. In the end, you realize that you could have done something about your diet or your nutrition, and you didn’t want to do anything, so now you face the consequences.” |
| “I didn’t receive that education where I was told to take care of myself … it hurts us a lot because we’re not educated in the sense of food or anything like that.” | |
| Theme 2: Education provided was incomplete and poor quality | The education provided typically occurred while participants were admitted for dialysis and were acutely ill. It was often fragmented, and learning occurred by piecemeal over time through discussions with clinicians, nursing staff, other patients, and through their own trial and error. |
| Treatment options influenced by nonmedical factors | “Only dialysis [was] discussed, and they weren’t very clear about a transplant, because I don’t have documents, and since I don’t have that, I can’t enroll in a waiting list. I don’t have insurance to get dialysis. I’m going to get dialysis only when I feel bad.” |
| “They didn’t tell me anything … because if I go to the [dialysis] clinic nobody will treat me. They won’t take me in because I don’t have any money or insurance of anything.” | |
| Education not delivered at appropriate level of health literacy | “I don’t even know what else to ask them about. The only thing I’d like to hear from them are some positive answers, right? Like, ‘you’ll recover from this, you will get better, you just need to do this and that …’ I’m not sure if I’m still hurt from the dialysis I got, but I don’t know what they did to me, whether they opened me up.” |
| “Since we don’t have any experience … sometimes you can’t even answer correctly … or many people don’t have the capacity of answering with words … our minds go blank.” | |
| Education provided while experiencing distress | “I don’t really ask much about dialysis. They tell me a lot of things, but it’s not that I don’t care, it’s just that sometimes people talk to me about dialysis, and when I get there, I am in a serious condition, so I am asleep. I sleep all day, so they can talk to me, but it’s as if I ignored them, because they talk to me but I’m not paying attention.” |
| “You’re interested in feeling better, not in learning more.” | |
| Theme 3: Lack of culturally concordant communication and care | The education was often provided in another language, was not culturally tailored, and did not incorporate their support system. |
| Education did not occur in preferred language | “When they talk to us in English … we don't know anything, but we just say yes out of respect. But we don't really know what are the good things and the bad things about what you're telling me.” |
| “Most people talk to me in English … I just don’t understand English.” | |
| Education did not incorporate support systems | “I don’t think [my family] knows much …. [They understand that my] kidneys are damaged … and that’s why I need dialysis. And I need to do it to stay alive, more than anything.” |
| “They understand this is something related to the kidneys … [but] get worried because instead of improving, [it appears I’m] getting worse.” | |
| Theme 4: Elements Latinx patients receiving emergency-only dialysis want in their education | Participants highlighted things they wished they were told when they started dialysis. To improve clinician messaging, they suggested using language that is direct and culture concordant, using visual aids for complex topics like vascular access, and incorporating traditional foods into dietary counseling. |
| Give overall prognosis and describe expected symptoms | “I’ve always liked to have people tell me things clearly, directly … instead of saying one thing and then another, and to keep me wrapped around it. I prefer them to tell me how things are, so that I can know if I can have high hopes or not. If the report is serious, okay, then I’ll know.” |
| “Explain to them the process of everything, from when you start … that there's going to be a time when they're going to start getting cramps ... and when you finish dialysis … you actually get dizzy and you feel quite exhausted.” | |
| Use culturally concordant language | “[The doctors should] speak in Spanish so I can understand them because sometimes they speak in English and I don't understand it. There are some things I understand and some things I don't understand, but for me, it would be much better in Spanish.” |
| “I think it would help me more if it was explained to me by someone who speaks Spanish fluently.” | |
| Use visual aids | “Images have always caught my attention. So, if it was explained to me with images, it would be a lot better …” |
| “When I was told that they would put a fistula in my hand … I don’t exactly understand what a fistula is like. I do understand more or less how it works, but I would like to have some images like, look, this is a fistula, it works like this.” | |
| Incorporate traditional foods into dietary counseling | “I don't eat salt, I don't eat tortilla, I don't eat bread. I eat flour tortilla, because they told me in the hospital that's the one I could eat the most. No corn tortilla, no sweet bread. No banana, no potato.” |
| “As I’m Hispanic, it’s mostly my nutrition. We don’t eat very healthy; tacos, cakes, we eat whatever, you know? And I have a specific diet.” | |
| Theme 5: Facilitators of patient activation and coping | Encouragement, family, and faith were identified as factors that helped participants cope with the diagnosis of kidney failure and treatment. |
| Encouragement and normalization of emotional experience | “I would say, ‘It's okay, just relax and keep going.’ Because really the process that [they’re] going to have to go through [is] a big one. And [they’re] going to be very sad because you get the melancholy, you get the feeling that you're not worth anything, that you're not good for anything with this. And then you start to have a lot of doubts ... [they] need a word of encouragement.” |
| “It’s been very helpful to me [to have people say] ‘let’s try it out … what we want here is the best for you.’” | |
| Include family in decision-making | “My son is 4 months old, he was born 8 days after I found out I needed dialysis, and it’s the same thing that many people, many friends would have done. Make the effort for your child, make the effort for your family.” |
| “I was one of those people that [said] I can’t do it and I don’t want to do it anymore. But if you have family and grandkids and everything like I do, you won’t do it for you, you would do it for them.” | |
| Faith | “You don’t have a normal life the way it was before ... I thank God because he’s giving me another chance to live. Even if I’m sick … I can still fight. You simply get sad … but at the same time I [thank] God for giving me another chance and not dying… I have a lot of faith in God, and I have to push forward.” |
| “Because you think the world is closing out on you, and you don’t need to close the doors to the world. Even if they say you will die, you have to trust God and yourself and try to do the impossible to survive.” | |
| Theme 6: Latinx patient recommendations to improve community outreach | Participants acknowledged that knowledge about nutrition, healthy lifestyle behaviors, and kidney health are needed in Latinx communities. To optimize impact, education should include patient testimonials in the form of videos. They recommended using social media, and providing education at churches or other community locations because many do not have access to medical care and do not receive education in clinical settings. |
| Promote diet and lifestyle education | “I think they should start educating all [Hispanic people] by telling them that they need to walk, exercise, eat healthily. Maybe [offer] more help [by] teaching them about nutrition. Not to stop eating, but to eat healthy. Then in the afternoon, or when you have time, to walk … or to do some exercise … because we lack information.” |
| “The best way to teach us is firstly telling us how to eat properly. [Tell people], ‘You need to eat healthy, otherwise you’ll keep getting ill.’ Because there isn’t a more dangerous pandemic than the one that comes through our mouths.” | |
| Personal testimonials influence self-care | “I would put myself as an example to them, so they can see how I am. They should take care of themselves on time, so they don’t get to be in the situation I am.” |
| “I think just having you showing videos, and having people give their testimonies … how they got to that point.” | |
| Videos, social media and community locations | “They could give information on the TV or … even on Facebook. Most people never put their phones down because they are using Facebook. Maybe they could give a statement at [church]. They regularly make announcements when the mass is over.” |
| “I think … at a community place where people gather, at a church [where] a lot of people attend good places. Places where people have a frequency [of] attending.” |
Figure. Themes With Associated Implications for Clinical Practice