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Preference of Life-Sustaining Treatment Among Patients With End Stage Renal Disease

Preference of Life-Sustaining Treatment Among Patients With End Stage Renal Disease

Recruiting
20 years and older
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

Although patients with kidney disease can rely on dialysis to prolong their lives, the complexity of the disease, the variability of the course of the disease, and the uncertainty of the prognosis often delay the discussion of issues at the end of life, and the deterioration of the condition often makes it impossible for the patient to express clearly or rationally. Treatment thoughts or preferences. Sufficient time is needed to think and discuss issues related to life treatment. Discuss with patients as soon as possible to help draw up end-of-life care plans, help patients realize end-of-life care preferences, assist family members to make complex treatment decisions, and alleviate medical providers' moral distress. Domestic life-sustaining treatment research is mostly signed by DNR for cancer patients and retrospective investigation of medical records, and seldom focuses on kidney disease patients and life-sustaining treatment survey preferences other than DNR content. This study sought to understand patients with kidney disease's preferences for life-sustaining care during disease progression, and to understand whether prognostic perceptions, symptom distress, dementia, and decision conflict affect patients' preferences. Pre-collected convenient sampling is expected to include 200 patients diagnosed with chronic kidney disease stage 5 or end-stage renal disease, including patients who have received regular dialysis. The survey will be conducted with a single questionnaire. There are five questionnaires, including: demographic characteristics, chronic kidney disease prognosis cognition And life-support treatment information questionnaire, short-form recall symptom assessment scale, loss of memory scale and decision-making conflict scale; after the researcher explains, the patient fills in by himself or the researcher fills in after the patient answers. It is expected that the results of the study will help clinical practitioners to understand the changes in the management of medical care for kidney disease patients when the disease worsens and assist in the management of patients' medical care, echoing the importance of advancing medical care planning in this population, for the future development of kidney disease A reference for care guidelines for debilitated patients, thereby improving care quality and satisfaction.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. Over 20 years old.
  2. Patients diagnosed with chronic kidney disease stage V or end-stage renal disease, and glomerular filtration rate less than 15ml/min/1.73m2; or patients receiving regular blood or peritoneal dialysis treatment.
  3. Those who have normal cognitive function (such as: able to read newspapers and magazines, and communicate with others), and can communicate in Mandarin and Taiwanese.

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. Severe cognitive impairment or visual or hearing impairment that makes it impossible to answer questions.
  2. Critically ill patients.
  3. Patients with chronic mental illness or their related diagnosis records.

Study details
    End Stage Renal Disease

NCT05878171

National Taiwan University Hospital

27 January 2024

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