| Literature DB >> 35459131 |
Stephanie Notaras1, Kelly Lambert2, Janette Perz3, Angela Makris4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Therapeutic strategies, including dietary intervention, to target non-dialysis dependent Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) progression have been at the forefront of recent renal research. Nephrologists and other renal health professionals are key stakeholders in the dietary management of patients with non-dialysis dependent CKD and referrals to dietetic services. The aims of this study were to explore (i) health professional perceptions regarding the role of diet in managing non-dialysis dependent CKD, and (ii) health professional practices regarding the provision of dietary advice and referrals to dietetic services.Entities:
Keywords: Allied health professional; Chronic kidney disease; Cross sectional survey; Dietary interventions; Dietitian; Doctor; Nephrologist; Nurse; Progression; Renal clinicians
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35459131 PMCID: PMC9034530 DOI: 10.1186/s12882-022-02790-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nephrol ISSN: 1471-2369 Impact factor: 2.585
Demographic characteristics of study participants
| Characteristic | All ( | Renal health professionals ( | Renal Dietitians ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | < 0.001* | |||
| 20–29 years | 19 (10) | 9 (6) | 10 (22) | |
| 30–39 years | 54 (28) | 34 (24) | 20 (44) | |
| 40–49 years | 45 (24) | 36 (25) | 9 (20) | |
| 50–59 years | 45 (24) | 42 (29) | 3 (7) | |
| 60 years and over | 26 (14) | 23 (16) | 3 (7) | |
| Gender | ||||
| Female | 144 (76) | 101 (70) | 43 (96) | < 0.001* |
| Role | ||||
| Nephrologist | 80 (42) | 80 (56) | n/a | n/a |
| Nephrology Trainee | 6 (3) | 6 (4) | n/a | n/a |
| Nurse | 54 (29) | 54 (37) | n/a | n/a |
| Dietitian | 45 (24) | n/a | 45 (100) | n/a |
| Other | 4 (2) | 4 (3) | n/a | n/a |
| Years of renal practice | 0.003* | |||
| 0–9 years | 80 (42) | 51 (36) | 29 (65) | |
| 10–19 years | 46 (24) | 35 (24) | 11 (24) | |
| 20–29 years | 30 (16) | 28 (19) | 2 (4) | |
| 30–39 years | 26 (14) | 23 (16) | 3 (7) | |
| 40 years or more | 7 (4) | 7 (5) | 0 | |
| Type of practice | ||||
| Public hospital | 182 (96) | 137 (95) | 45 (100) | 1 |
| Private clinics | 35 (19) | 29 (20) | 6 (13) | 0.38 |
| Academic | 13 (7) | 12 (8) | 1 (2) | 0.31 |
| Clinician and researcher | 34 (18) | 30 (21) | 4 (9) | 0.78 |
| Trainee | 7 (4) | 7 (5) | n/a | n/a |
| Location of training | 0.064 | |||
| Australia | 169 (89) | 119 (83) | 32 (71) | |
| New Zealand | 17 (9) | 7 (5) | 7 (16) | |
| Overseas | 3 (2) | 17 (12) | 6 (13) | |
| Practice location | ||||
| Metropolitan | 133 (70) | 101 (70) | 32 (71) | 1 |
| Outer metropolitan | 32 (17) | 25 (17) | 7 (16) | 1 |
| Rural | 49 (26) | 37 (26) | 12 (27) | 1 |
| Subspeciality | ||||
| Transplant | 16 (8) | 16 (11) | n/a | n/a |
| Dialysis | 41 (21) | 41 (28) | n/a | n/a |
| General nephrology | 44 (23) | 44 (31) | n/a | n/a |
| Chronic kidney disease | 19 (10) | 19 (13) | n/a | n/a |
| All of the above | 16 (8) | 16 (11) | n/a | n/a |
| Nutrition | 45 (24) | 0 | 45 (100) | n/a |
| Other | 8 (4) | 8 (6) | n/a | n/a |
| Type of patients | ||||
| Adults | 182 (96) | 138 (96) | 44 (98) | |
| Children | 4 (2) | 4 (3) | 0 | n/a |
| Both | 3 (2) | 2 (1) | 1 (2) | |
| Health professionals available in the respondent’s unit | ||||
| Nurse | 179 (95) | 137 (95) | 42 (93) | 3.63 |
| Dietitian | 179 (95) | 138 (96) | 45(100) | 2.53 |
| Social Worker | 165 (87) | 127 (88) | 38 (84) | 1 |
| Pharmacist | 130 (67) | 104 (72) | 26 (58) | 0.06 |
| Psychologist | 85 (45) | 64 (44) | 21 (47) | 0.86 |
| Occupational Therapist | 62 (33) | 49 (34) | 13 (29) | 0.59 |
| Other | 16 (8) | 9 (6) | 7 (16) | 0.65 |
| Unsure | 3 (2) | 1 (1) | 2 (4) | 0.14 |
*Data is presented as count (percentage). N/a indicates not applicable. Nurse includes those with specialist qualifications (for example, nurse practitioner, clinical nurse consultant, clinical nurse specialist). *Indicates p-value < 0.05
Fig. 1Renal health professional perceptions about the role of diet in varying stages of CKD. A: Comparison of perceptions about the role of diet in CKD Stages 1–4 between non-dietetic health professionals and dietitians. *P-value = 0.002. B: Comparison of perceptions about the role of diet in pre-dialysis between non-dietetic health professionals and dietitians. P-value = 0.15. C: Comparison of perceptions about the role of diet in dialysis between non-dietetic health professionals and dietitians. P-value = 0.25. D: Comparison of perceptions about the role of diet in pre-transplant between non-dietetic health professionals and dietitians. P-value = 0.38. E: Comparison of perceptions about the role of diet in post-transplant between non-dietetic health professionals and dietitians. P-value = 0.27. F: Comparison of perceptions about impact of dietetic intervention in CKD between non- dietetic health professionals and dietitians. *P-value < 0.001
Dietary advice provided by non-dietetic health professionals to patients with CKD Stage 3
| Question | n (%) | Question | |
|---|---|---|---|
| How often do your patients ask about diet? ( | Dietary advice provided ( | ||
| Never | 1 (1) | Low salt diet | 72 (65) |
| Sometimes | 48 (33) | Lower protein diet | 28 (25) |
| Half the time | 35 (24) | Low potassium/phosphate diet | 38 (34) |
| Most of the time | 49 (34) | Glycaemic control | 16 (14) |
| Always | 11 (8) | Weight management | 23 (21) |
| What do you say to patients about diet and CKD progression? ( | Increase plant foods | 13 (12) | |
| Diet has no impact | 2 (2) | General healthy eating | 18 (16) |
| The right diet can reduce progression | 74 (67) | Avoid processed foods | 9 (8) |
| Nothing | 25 (22) | Fluid recommendations | 33 (30) |
| Other | 10 (9) | Other | 33 (30) |
| Determinants for dietary advice ( | No advice given | 14 (13) | |
| Blood test results | 99 (67) | How is dietary advice given? ( | |
| Adequacy of BP | 71 (49) | Verbally | 56 (50) |
| Adequacy of BSLs | 86 (60) | Verbally and written | 53 (48) |
| Individualised—based on assessment | 11 (8) | Written | 6 (5) |
| Give advice to all patients | 83 (58) | Nil advice given | 4 (4) |
| No dietary advice given | 6 (4) | Refer to dietitian | 65 (59) |
| Source of dietary information ( | Most challenging aspects of giving dietary advice ( | ||
| Online | 54 (49) | Patient motivation to change | 55 (50) |
| Nephrology training | 48 (43) | Time restraints | 40 (37) |
| Dietetics department | 90 (81) | Patient's health literacy | 24 (22) |
| Self-learning | 57 (51) | Own knowledge | 8 (7) |
| Conferences | 43 (39) | Patient's current knowledge | 5 (5) |
| Renal nutrition guidelines | 60 (54) | ||
CKD chronic kidney disease, BP blood pressure. BSLs Blood sugar levels, Some variables may have missing data and not add up to the total participant response rate. Respondents could select more than one response except for two questions: (1) how often patients ask about diet? and (2) what you say to patients about diet and CKD progression?
Data are presented as counts (percentages)
Referral practices by non-dietetic health professionals to dietetic services for patients with CKD Stage 3
| Question | Question | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| How often do you refer patients to a renal dietitian in CKD Stage 3 ( | Reasons for referring patients to a dietitian ( | ||
| Never | 12 (11) | Patients not adhering to advice | 26 (25) |
| 0–25% of the time | 46 (41) | Patient request | 60 (58) |
| 26–50% of the time | 21 (19) | Reduce risk of CKD progression | 66 (63) |
| 51–75% of the time | 9 (8) | Treat malnutrition | 45 (43) |
| 76–99% of the time | 2 (2) | Oral nutrition support | 51 (49) |
| I refer all patients | 21 (19) | Manage fluid overload | 36 (35) |
| How often do patients initiate a referral to a renal dietitian? ( | Electrolyte/weight management education | 11 (11) | |
| Never | 20 (14) | Factors perceived to enhance referrals to renal dietitians ( | |
| Sometimes | 93 (64) | Dedicated dietitian | 74 (67) |
| Half the time | 21 (15) | Evidence of positive clinical outcomes from DI | 62 (58) |
| Most of the time | 9 (6) | Dietitian's skills and experience | 56 (51) |
| Always | 1 (1) | Hearing positive feedback from patients | 55 (50) |
| What is your preference for who provides dietary advice? ( | Patient interest | 64 (58) | |
| Nephrologist | 4 (4) | Shorter waiting times to see dietitian | 51 (46) |
| Renal Dietitian | 98 (88) | Suggestions for improvements to provision of renal dietetic advice ( | |
| Renal Nurse | 0 | Additional training (renal dietary information, counselling skills) | 50 (46) |
| Any renal team member | 9 (8) | Better written resources | 70 (64) |
| Reasons for not referring patients ( | All patients to be referred to dietitian once diagnosed with CKD | 61 (56) | |
| I can give advice | 13 (12) | Better service provision (frequent appointments, more dietitians) | 60 (55) |
| Patient declined referral | 66 (62) | Would you refer patients to a renal dietitian from CKD Stage 3 if the service was available? ( | |
| Visit burden for patients | 35 (33) | Yes | 93 (84) |
| Do not think patients will adhere to advice | 9 (8) | No | 3 (3) |
| Significant waiting times to see dietitian | 36 (34) | Unsure | 15 (14) |
| Poor service provision | 9 (8) | ||
| Not enough evidence that diet works in CKD | 12 (11) | ||
| Other | 12 (11) | ||
DI dietetic intervention. Some variables may have missing data and not add up to the total participant response rate. Respondents could select more than one response except for two questions: (1) how often they refer patients with CKD Stage 3 to a dietitian? and (2) how often patients initiate a referral to a dietitian?
aData is presented as count (percentage).
Factors predicting referral to dietetic services for patients with Stage 3 CKD
| Variable | Adjusted Odds Ratio | 95% CI | P-Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age of health professional | 0.62 | 0.12–6.13 | 0.65 |
| Female gender | 1.52 | 0.57–4.05 | 0.40 |
| Health professional role (nephrologist versus non-nephrologist) | 3.07 | 1.36–6.92 | 0.007* |
| Location of training (Australia versus overseas) | 0.55 | 0.20–1.57 | 0.27 |
| Location of practice (non-metropolitan versus metropolitan) | 0.75 | 0.30–1.89 | 0.55 |
| Years of practice | 0.4 | 0.08–4.97 | 0.17 |
*Indicates p-value < 0.05