4.5 Article

Quality of life in older adults receiving hemodialysis: a qualitative study

期刊

QUALITY OF LIFE RESEARCH
卷 29, 期 3, 页码 655-663

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11136-019-02349-9

关键词

Aged; Patient-centered care; Social support; End-stage renal disease

资金

  1. National Institute on Aging [Claude D. Pepper Older Americans Independence Center] [P30 AG028716]
  2. National Institute on Aging [GEMSSTAR Program] [R03 AG050834, K24 AG049077-01A1, K76AG059930]
  3. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences of the National Institutes of Health [KL2TR002554, UL1TR002378]
  4. T. Franklin Williams Scholarship Award (Atlantic Philanthropies, Inc.)
  5. T. Franklin Williams Scholarship Award (John A. Hartford Foundation)
  6. T. Franklin Williams Scholarship Award (Alliance for Academic Internal Medicine-Association of Specialty Professors)
  7. T. Franklin Williams Scholarship Award (American Society of Nephrology Foundation for Kidney Research)
  8. Doris Duke Charitable Foundation [2015207]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

PurposePatient priorities for quality of life change with age. We conducted a qualitative study to identify quality of life themes of importance to older adults receiving dialysis and the extent to which these are represented in existing quality of life instruments.MethodsWe conducted semi-structured interviews with 12 adults aged >= 75 years receiving hemodialysis to elicit participant perspectives on what matters most to them in life. We used framework analysis methodology to process interview transcripts (coding, charting, and mapping), identify major themes, and compare these themes by participant frailty status. We examined for representation of our study's subthemes in the Kidney Disease Quality of Life (KDQOL-36) and the World Health Organization Quality of Life for Older Adults (WHOQOL-OLD) instruments.ResultsAmong the 12 participants, average age was 81 (4.2) years, 7 African-American, 6 women, and 6 met frailty criteria. We identified two major quality of life themes: (1) having physical well-being (subthemes: being able to do things independently, having symptom control, maintaining physical health, and being alive) and (2) having social support (subthemes: having practical social support, emotional social support, and socialization). Perspectives on the subthemes often varied by frailty status. For example, being alive meant surviving from day-to-day for frail participants, but included a desire for new life experiences for non-frail participants. The majority of the subthemes did not correspond with domains in the KDQOL-36 and WHOQOL-OLD instruments.ConclusionNovel instruments are likely needed to elicit the dominant themes of having physical well-being and having social support identified by older adults receiving dialysis.

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