| Literature DB >> 35571230 |
Yaquelin A Arevalo Iraheta1, Ariana L Murillo1, Erica W Ho2, Shailesh M Advani2, LaShara Davis3, Amanda Faye Lipsey4, Mindy Kim1, Amy D Waterman3.
Abstract
Rationale & Objective: In early 2020, we activated a telephone hotline, the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) Kidney or Transplant Listening and Resource Center, to learn more about the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the stress and information-seeking behaviors of dialysis and transplant patients. Study Design: A mixed-methods study including semi-structured, qualitative interviews probing about emotional, health, and financial challenges experienced and quantitative surveys assessing depression and anxiety levels and information-seeking behaviors. Setting & Participants: 99 participants (28 dialysis patients; 71 transplant patients), varying by race and ethnicity (Hispanic, 25.3%; White, 23.2%; Asian, 24.2%; Black, 24.2%), shared their COVID-19 pandemic experiences and information-seeking behaviors by telephone. Interviews and surveys were conducted from June 17, 2020, to November 24, 2020. Analytical Approach: Qualitative themes were identified using thematic analysis. Frequencies were calculated to assess levels of depression and anxiety using the Patient Health Questionnaire for Depression and Anxiety and types of information-seeking behaviors.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; PHQ-4; coronavirus pandemic; dialysis patients; mixed-methods; qualitative; quantitative; semi-structured interview; telephone hotline; transplant patients
Year: 2022 PMID: 35571230 PMCID: PMC9087151 DOI: 10.1016/j.xkme.2022.100479
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Kidney Med ISSN: 2590-0595
Participants’ Demographic Information
| Characteristics | Transplant | Dialysis Patients |
|---|---|---|
| N | 72 | 27 |
| Age, mean y | 54 | 55 |
| Gender | ||
| Female | 35 | 12 |
| Male | 28 | 11 |
| Did not respond | 9 | 4 |
| Race | ||
| White | 20 | 3 |
| Black or African American | 15 | 9 |
| Asian | 17 | 7 |
| Other | 2 | 1 |
| Ethnicity | ||
| Hispanic | 18 | 7 |
| Primary language | ||
| English | 67 | 25 |
| Spanish | 5 | 2 |
| Education | ||
| HS, GED, or less | 12 | 5 |
| Some college | 11 | 7 |
| Associate or bachelor’s | 24 | 9 |
| Postgraduate | 20 | 4 |
| Did not respond | 5 | 2 |
| PHQ-4 score | ||
| 0-5 | 58 | 20 |
| 6-12 | 9 | 5 |
| Did not respond | 5 | 2 |
Abbreviations: GED, general equivalency diploma; HS, high school; PHQ-4, Patient Health Questionnaire for Depression and Anxiety.
Transplant patients were comprised of 68 kidney transplant patients, 2 heart transplant patients, and 2 lung transplant patients.
How Patients Sought Health Information During the COVID-19 Pandemic
| How Patients Learned About COVID-19 | Percentage | Transplant | Dialysis | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| From news sources | 80 (80.81%) | 57 (80.28%) | 23 (82.14%) | 0.61 |
| From their health-care institutions | 64 (64.45%) | 46 (64.79%) | 18 (64.29%) | 0.96 |
| By searching the Internet | 53 (53.54%) | 41 (57.75%) | 12 (42.86%) | 0.18 |
| From their friends and family members | 46 (46.46%) | 34 (47.89%) | 12 (42.86%) | 0.65 |
| From social media | 35 (35.35%) | 24 (33.80%) | 11 (39.29%) | 0.61 |
| From patient groups | 12 (12.12%) | 9 (12.68%) | 3 (10.71%) | 0.78 |
Abbreviation: COVID-19, coronavirus disease 2019.
Emotional Challenges During the COVID-19 Pandemic
| Themes | Exemplar Quotes From Participant Interviews | |
|---|---|---|
| PHQ 4 score 0-5 | PHQ-4 score 6-12 | |
| Fear of contracting COVID-19, because of a weakened immune system. | “I'm afraid of getting the flu. I'm afraid of getting anything … I know my body has a hard time fighting it because it's immunosuppressed. So yes, I'm afraid of getting it and that's why I'm not exposing myself.” - Transplant Patient 9 | “… I guess the fear of getting it and, and not overcoming it because of, you know, the health situation that I have.” - Transplant Patient 52 |
| Increased vigilance due to being immunocompromised led to increased anxiety levels. | “Just like when I’m in – when I do have to go into the grocery store. People don't honor the 6 feet social distancing. People are wearing the mask wrong, and it's just like my anxiety just kicked in. That's it.” - Transplant Patient 704 | “And at this point, it's just causing an incredible amount of anxiety because school starts in 3 weeks … it really is taking a toll on mental health just constantly trying to be like, how am I going to protect myself?” - Transplant Patient 1022 |
| Staying at home resulting in extreme isolation and anxiety or panic attacks. | “Just, I would say extreme isolation. I live by myself and I'm single. So, I haven't seen, I haven't had interaction with another human really since March 9th" - Transplant Patient 86 | “… first time in my life I was ever had a panic anxiety attack at 44 years old after being a Marine. And everything in my life. I've never panicked and had a panic attack until I was in isolation due to COVID.” - Transplant Patient 13 |
| Increased vigilance led to patients having strained relationships with family members. | “It's affecting my family as well. You know my husband because he still has to go to work. And because I'm too cautious and I, I worry and too scared that, he's bringing the virus in, and then might infect me. And I can't let my daughter like I have, you know it's strained my relationship with my daughter because I don't let her go out and then always because I worry that you show–that she goes out and meet her friends and it puts me at risk.” - Transplant patient 52 | |
Abbreviation: COVID-19, coronavirus disease 2019.
Health-Care Management Challenges During the COVID-19 Pandemic
| Themes | Exemplar Quotes from Participants’ Interviews |
|---|---|
| Preventing exposure to COVID-19 stopped patients from entering medical and public spaces. | “Staying out of the public realm so as not to catch the sickness, deciding to go into the doctor or stay home and just call, going and get my shots at a place that I can trust. I recently had a terrible experience at CVS waiting for a shingle shot, and it made me walk out without it because their place where they administer the shots was filthy and obviously hadn't been cared for, sanitized, wiped down or anything … I'm just afraid to go back to that drugstore.” – Transplant Patient 25 |
| Preventing exposure to COVID-19 led to postponed medical visits. | “So, I see my transplant center about 3 times a year, 3 to 4 times a year … They wanted to see me and then I was like, ‘No. I’m not coming in.’ And then I was going to push it off again and they’re like, ‘no. You haven’t gotten bloodwork since February. You have to get your blood work done.’ And you have to do a telehealth appointment because that’s like the longest I went without seeing them. Or getting bloodwork done.” - Transplant Patient 15 |
| Preventing exposure to COVID-19 affected accessibility of getting medication. | “… every time my daughter has to go to Rite Aid. She's getting exposed. And she's about as panicked as I am about exposure. So, you know this it's, it's, it's crazy. I'm thinking maybe I'm going to try and do apparently CVS will actually mail the drugs to you.” - Transplant Patient 41 |
| Difficulty receiving up-to-date, patient-focused health education or information. | “The reason why I called - the number wasn't to participate in the survey, but rather to get some more information about how to communicate to my doctors and my transplant team that I need some help getting reasonable accommodations. My employer, because I'm a high school teacher, so it's like a very high-risk environment. And I just found out about the survey that way, and it made sense to me that, like, I'm spending, I'm spending all this time trying to get these resources and trying to find out this information. And there are lots of transplant patients out there who are also probably in a similar boat and need, you know, we need to kind of advocate for ourselves” - Transplant Patient 1022 |
| Difficulty working within telehealth platforms | “I’m kind of forced to do the telehealth because that's the way they would rather do it. But I missed the face-to-face interaction. So, I would hope that someday we can get back to actually sitting face to face with your doctor, because that's a little more, that appeals to me a little more than talking to a computer screen.” - Transplant Patient 430 |
| Delays in appointments and not being able to see their doctor in a timely fashion. | “But I think overall, I think some of it is the fact that, you know, being a transplant recipient and not being able to get to my doctors in a timely fashion, have been a struggle …” - Transplant Patient 2 |
| Delays in getting a kidney transplant. | “And I'm still waiting to hear from the pretransplant unit whether I've been accepted into the new program or not. And when I call, they just say that, ‘We're really backed up because of COVID,’ but nobody's giving me a clear-cut answer. Did you get my referral? Like, am I in the system? Like, I have living donors that are willing and asking me questions, but I can't give them any answers to the questions they're asking because nobody is telling me whether they got the referral and they just say, ‘We're really backlogged.’ Like, we'll get to you eventually.” - Transplant Patient 84 |
| Difficulty receiving dialysis supplies. | “[My dialysis supply company] are not delivering my actual supplies, they're not putting it upstairs in like the room that we originally designated. And it's hard to get like these boxes of fluid upstairs. So, they you know, all today because of COVID … And sometimes I have like, over 20 boxes to get upstairs and it's really hard. You know, to get those–to get these heavy boxes upstairs. So, I just wish, I mean. I mean, I know they're trying to protect their drivers, but I just wish they would find like another alternative.” - Dialysis Patient 19 |
Abbreviation: COVID-19, coronavirus disease 2019.
Financial Challenges During the COVID-19 Pandemic
| Themes | Exemplar Quotes From Participants’ Interviews |
|---|---|
| Maintaining health insurance due to job losses. | “… so, like with my Medicaid with health insurance, that kind of financial thing because of the cost of my health insurance right now, it is. It's currently my state has a Medicaid program. It's free. But I don't know, it's going to start costing money. And if I don't have a job, how many of you will pay for that? So that's something that's up in the works. It's in the works right now trying to figure out how to keep my coverage. Beyond its coverage only goes until the end of June. I want to kind of know what my options are between June 30. And when I go back to August third the month of July, basically, yeah.” - Transplant Patient 2 |
| Losing employment. | “The loss of the job and not being able to pursue one. I have worked since I was 16 years old. And I have never, even with my transplant, I was out of work for about 5 wk and was back. So, this has been frustrating in that sense.” - Transplant Patient 112 |
| Being unable to work. | “I was an executive chef for a Hilton. I couldn't be at work on advice of my kidney coordinators because it's an international travel.” - Transplant Patient 13 |
| Being unable to seek home repair support and childcare support. | I wish I could get a handyman in to do all that stuff. But I don't want a guy in. I don't want anybody in my house.” - Transplant Patient 10 |
Abbreviation: COVID-19, coronavirus disease 2019.