Kara Schick-Makaroff, Charlotte Berendonk, Marlo Salum, Peter Yoeun, Jenny Wichart, Marni Armstrong, Stephanie Thompson, Meghan Elliott, Loretta Lee, Terry Smith, Frances Reintjes, Denise Fillier, Scott Klarenbach, Richard Sawatzky
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Phase 1 included: (a) an online clinician survey (n = 199), (b) 11 focus groups and 2 interviews involving 10 people with lived experience and 44 clinicians and administrators, and (c) a scoping review of evidence-based pharmacological treatment. Descriptive analyses of the survey data and summative content analysis of qualitative data (written survey comments and data from focus groups and interviews) were conducted to understand current processes, health services, and interventions for mental health care in Alberta Kidney Care for people receiving dialysis, and to determine appropriateness and opportunities of existing mental health services and interventions. The results were used to develop preliminary statements to inform development of the pathway. Attributes of centeredness in health care - being unique, being heard, and shared responsibility - guided pathway development. Phase 2 involved building consensus on these statements via two rounds of modified Delphi surveys (n = 59 and 51 for rounds 1 and 2, respectively), followed by a consensus call on a virtual platform for discussion and voting involving 27 participants. Voters rated their agreement for each statement using a 3-point Likert scale. Consensus was defined a priori as ≥80% agreement by two groups of voters: people with lived experience and clinicians/others.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>Phase 1 results informed the development of 68 statements in round 1 of Delphi voting; 42 were approved. Based on voter comments, 11 new statements were developed and 23 statements were revised. Round 2 of Delphi voting included 34 statements. A call was held with people with lived experience to understand why they voted differently than clinicians/others. We learned that some statement language was too technical, such as \"assessment\" or \"score.\" We talked through each statement and people with lived experience verbally approved the intention of all statements. Through this dialogue, and round 2 voting, 20 statements were approved. A consensus call was held, concluding with voting on 5 statements previously not approved by both groups; 3 were approved. In total, 66 statements were approved for use in development of a pathway addressing symptoms of depression and anxiety, as well as coping. Approved statements guided depiction of the pathway as an algorithm for initial conversations, assessment, follow-up (including \"red-flags\" or urgent referrals), and management with non-pharmacological and pharmacological supports.</p><p><strong>Conclusion: </strong>Strategies to ensure person-centeredness provided all involved parties with opportunities to engage in meaningful ways in pathway development, a novel approach which may provide transferable lessons for kidney programs across Canada and internationally.</p>","PeriodicalId":18998,"journal":{"name":"Nephron","volume":" ","pages":"392-410"},"PeriodicalIF":1.8000,"publicationDate":"2025-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12215154/pdf/","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Developing and Tailoring a Person-Centred Pathway for Mental Health Care for People Receiving Dialysis.\",\"authors\":\"Kara Schick-Makaroff, Charlotte Berendonk, Marlo Salum, Peter Yoeun, Jenny Wichart, Marni Armstrong, Stephanie Thompson, Meghan Elliott, Loretta Lee, Terry Smith, Frances Reintjes, Denise Fillier, Scott Klarenbach, Richard Sawatzky\",\"doi\":\"10.1159/000544058\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><strong>Introduction: </strong>Mental health symptoms are underdiagnosed and undertreated among people receiving dialysis treatment. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
在接受透析治疗的人群中,心理健康症状未被充分诊断和治疗。尽管这一人群中抑郁(40%)和焦虑(42%)症状的患病率很高,但尚无国际指南。为了弥补这一差距,加拿大艾伯塔省不同团体开展了一个多阶段项目,以制定和调整一条途径,支持为接受透析的艾伯塔省人提供以人为本的精神卫生保健。方法:本研究以患者为中心,分两期进行。第一阶段包括:a)在线临床医生调查(n=199), b) 11个焦点小组和2个访谈,涉及10名有生活经验的人和44名临床医生和管理人员,以及c)循证药物治疗的范围审查。对调查数据进行描述性分析,对定性数据进行总结性内容分析(书面调查意见和焦点小组和访谈的数据),以了解艾伯塔省肾脏护理中心对接受透析的人的精神卫生保健的当前流程、卫生服务和干预措施,并确定现有精神卫生服务和干预措施的适当性和机会。这些结果被用于制定初步声明,以告知该途径的发展。以医疗保健为中心的属性——独特、被倾听和共同承担责任——指导了路径的发展。第二阶段包括通过两轮修改后的德尔菲调查(第一轮和第二轮分别为59和51)就这些陈述建立共识,然后在虚拟平台上进行共识呼吁,由27名参与者进行讨论和投票。选民们用3分李克特量表对他们对每一项声明的同意程度进行打分。共识被先验地定义为两组选民:有生活经验的人和临床医生/其他人同意≥80%。结果:第一阶段的结果为第一轮德尔菲投票中68个陈述的制定提供了信息;批准了42项。根据选民的意见,拟订了11项新声明,修订了23项声明。第二轮德尔菲投票包括34个陈述。与有生活经验的人进行了一次电话会议,以了解为什么他们的投票与临床医生/其他人不同。我们了解到一些陈述语言过于技术性,例如“评估”或“分数”。我们讨论了每一个陈述,有生活经验的人口头认可了所有陈述的意图。通过这次对话和第二轮投票,20项声明获得通过。举行了一次协商一致呼吁,最后对两组以前未批准的5项声明进行了投票;3人获批。总共有66份声明被批准用于开发解决抑郁和焦虑症状以及应对的途径。批准的声明指导了作为初始对话、评估、随访(包括“危险信号”或紧急转诊)以及非药物和药物支持管理的算法的途径描述。结论:确保以人为本的策略为所有相关方提供了参与途径开发的有意义方式的机会,这是一种新颖的方法,可以为加拿大乃至全球的肾脏项目提供可转移的经验教训。
Developing and Tailoring a Person-Centred Pathway for Mental Health Care for People Receiving Dialysis.
Introduction: Mental health symptoms are underdiagnosed and undertreated among people receiving dialysis treatment. Despite a high prevalence of depression (40%) and anxiety (42%) symptoms in this population, international guidance does not exist. To address this gap, a multi-phase project involved collaboration by diverse groups in Alberta, Canada to develop and tailor a pathway that supports person-centred mental health care for Albertans receiving dialysis.
Methods: This mixed methods patient-oriented research was conducted in two phases. Phase 1 included: (a) an online clinician survey (n = 199), (b) 11 focus groups and 2 interviews involving 10 people with lived experience and 44 clinicians and administrators, and (c) a scoping review of evidence-based pharmacological treatment. Descriptive analyses of the survey data and summative content analysis of qualitative data (written survey comments and data from focus groups and interviews) were conducted to understand current processes, health services, and interventions for mental health care in Alberta Kidney Care for people receiving dialysis, and to determine appropriateness and opportunities of existing mental health services and interventions. The results were used to develop preliminary statements to inform development of the pathway. Attributes of centeredness in health care - being unique, being heard, and shared responsibility - guided pathway development. Phase 2 involved building consensus on these statements via two rounds of modified Delphi surveys (n = 59 and 51 for rounds 1 and 2, respectively), followed by a consensus call on a virtual platform for discussion and voting involving 27 participants. Voters rated their agreement for each statement using a 3-point Likert scale. Consensus was defined a priori as ≥80% agreement by two groups of voters: people with lived experience and clinicians/others.
Results: Phase 1 results informed the development of 68 statements in round 1 of Delphi voting; 42 were approved. Based on voter comments, 11 new statements were developed and 23 statements were revised. Round 2 of Delphi voting included 34 statements. A call was held with people with lived experience to understand why they voted differently than clinicians/others. We learned that some statement language was too technical, such as "assessment" or "score." We talked through each statement and people with lived experience verbally approved the intention of all statements. Through this dialogue, and round 2 voting, 20 statements were approved. A consensus call was held, concluding with voting on 5 statements previously not approved by both groups; 3 were approved. In total, 66 statements were approved for use in development of a pathway addressing symptoms of depression and anxiety, as well as coping. Approved statements guided depiction of the pathway as an algorithm for initial conversations, assessment, follow-up (including "red-flags" or urgent referrals), and management with non-pharmacological and pharmacological supports.
Conclusion: Strategies to ensure person-centeredness provided all involved parties with opportunities to engage in meaningful ways in pathway development, a novel approach which may provide transferable lessons for kidney programs across Canada and internationally.
期刊介绍:
''Nephron'' comprises three sections, which are each under the editorship of internationally recognized leaders and served by specialized Associate Editors. Apart from high-quality original research, ''Nephron'' publishes invited reviews/minireviews on up-to-date topics. Papers undergo an innovative and transparent peer review process encompassing a Presentation Report which assesses and summarizes the presentation of the paper in an unbiased and standardized way.