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Urgency for Kidney Palliative Care in Chinese Maintenance Hemodialysis Patients.

KI Reports 2023 December
INTRODUCTION: The aim of this study is to understand nephrology medical staff's awareness of, basic knowledge of, practical ability of, and the barriers to palliative kidney care to patients on maintenance hemodialysis (HD) in mainland China.

METHODS: This cross-sectional descriptive study employed convenience sampling of medical staff (physicians and nurses) working in nephrology departments in mainland China. Independent predictors of self-assessment ability for palliative care (PC) were determined using multivariate binary logistic regression.

RESULTS: Responses were received from medical staff in 28 provinces and 657 questionnaires were analyzed. Among the participants, 53.1% (349/657) were doctors, and only 4.3% claimed to be confident in providing PC to patients on HD. The average score of self-assessing ability for PC was 2.65 ± 1.15 (range 1-5). Among the 580 participants who experienced patient withdrawal from dialysis, only 16.0% reported that their patients had well-planned withdrawal from dialysis. Male (odds ratio [OR] [95% confidence interval [CI], 0.585 [0.34-0.99], P  = 0.048), nurse (OR [95% CI], 1.81 [1.01-3.27], P  = 0.047), more experience in dealing with deceased cases (OR [95% CI], 1.28 [1.02-1.61], P  = 0.034), less experience of medical disputes before/after withdrawal from dialysis (OR [95% CI], 0.62 [0.40-0.98], P  = 0.041), and PC training experiences (OR [95% CI], 2.33 [1.86-2.91], P  < 0.001) were independently correlated with significant better self-assessing ability for PC.

CONCLUSION: This study demonstrates that the nephrology medical staff had a positive attitude but lacked relative knowledge and training in PC. Institutionalized education, training models, practice guidelines for kidney PC, and guidelines for well-planned withdrawal from dialysis according to cultural background are urgently needed in mainland China.

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