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Patient and Clinician Perspectives on Electronic Patient-Reported Outcome Measures in the Management of Advanced CKD: A Qualitative Study

Authors :
Natalie Walmsley-Allen
Christel McMullan
Paul Cockwell
Mary Dutton
Anita Slade
Derek Kyte
Tom Marshall
Olalekan Lee Aiyegbusi
Melanie Calvert
Source :
American Journal of Kidney Diseases. 74:167-178
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2019.

Abstract

Rationale & Objective Chronic kidney disease (CKD) can substantially affect patients' health-related quality of life. Electronic patient-reported outcome measures (ePROMs) may capture symptoms and health-related quality of life and assist in the management of CKD. This study explored patient and clinician views on the use of a renal ePROM system. Study Design Qualitative study. Setting & Participants 12 patients with stage 4 or 5 CKD (non–dialysis dependent); 22 clinicians (6 CKD community nurses, 1 clinical psychologist, 10 nephrologists, 3 specialist registrars, and 2 renal surgeons) in the United Kingdom. Analytical Approach Semi-structured interviews and focus group discussion during which patients received paper versions of the Kidney Disease Quality of Life-36 and the Integrated Patient Outcome Scale-Renal to exemplify the type of content that could be included in an ePROM. Thematic analysis of interview transcripts. Results 4 themes were identified: (1) general opinions of PROMs, (2) potential benefits and applications of an ePROM system, (3) practical considerations for the implementation of ePROMs, and (4) concerns, barriers, and facilitators. Patients were willing to complete ePROMs on a regular basis as part of their care despite clinician concerns about patient burden. Patients assessed the questionnaires favorably. Clinicians suggested that the extent of adoption of renal ePROM systems in routine clinical settings should be based on evidence of significant impact on patient outcomes. Clinicians were concerned that an ePROM system may raise patient expectations to unrealistic levels and expose clinicians to the risk for litigation. Patients and clinicians identified potential benefits and highlighted issues and concerns that need to be addressed to ensure the successful implementation of the renal ePROM system. Limitations Transferability of the findings may be limited because only English-speaking participants were recruited to the study. Conclusions A renal ePROM system may play a supportive role in the routine clinical management of patients with advanced CKD if the concerns of clinicians and patients can be sufficiently addressed.

Details

ISSN :
02726386
Volume :
74
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American Journal of Kidney Diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f67bef30ebcf60afd8e1dfe638f705f0
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1053/j.ajkd.2019.02.011