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Barriers to successful implementation of care in home haemodialysis (BASIC-HHD):1. Study design, methods and rationale

BACKGROUND: Ten years on from the National Institute of Health and Clinical Excellence’ technology appraisal guideline on haemodialysis in 2002; the clinical community is yet to rise to the challenge of providing home haemodialysis (HHD) to 10-15% of the dialysis cohort. The renal registry report, s...

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Autores principales: Jayanti, Anuradha, Wearden, Alison J, Morris, Julie, Brenchley, Paul, Abma, Inger, Bayer, Steffen, Barlow, James, Mitra, Sandip
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3851985/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24044499
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2369-14-197
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author Jayanti, Anuradha
Wearden, Alison J
Morris, Julie
Brenchley, Paul
Abma, Inger
Bayer, Steffen
Barlow, James
Mitra, Sandip
author_facet Jayanti, Anuradha
Wearden, Alison J
Morris, Julie
Brenchley, Paul
Abma, Inger
Bayer, Steffen
Barlow, James
Mitra, Sandip
author_sort Jayanti, Anuradha
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Ten years on from the National Institute of Health and Clinical Excellence’ technology appraisal guideline on haemodialysis in 2002; the clinical community is yet to rise to the challenge of providing home haemodialysis (HHD) to 10-15% of the dialysis cohort. The renal registry report, suggests underutilization of a treatment type that has had a lot of research interest and several publications worldwide on its apparent benefit for both physical and mental health of patients. An understanding of the drivers to introducing and sustaining the modality, from organizational, economic, clinical and patient perspectives is fundamental to realizing the full benefits of the therapy with the potential to provide evidence base for effective care models. Through the BASIC-HHD study, we seek to understand the clinical, patient and carer related psychosocial, economic and organisational determinants of successful uptake and maintenance of home haemodialysis and thereby, engage all major stakeholders in the process. DESIGN AND METHODS: We have adopted an integrated mixed methodology (convergent, parallel design) for this study. The study arms include a. patient; b. organization; c. carer and d. economic evaluation. The three patient study cohorts (n = 500) include pre-dialysis patients (200), hospital haemodialysis (200) and home haemodialysis patients (100) from geographically distinct NHS sites, across the country and with variable prevalence of home haemodialysis. The pre-dialysis patients will also be prospectively followed up for a period of 12 months from study entry to understand their journey to renal replacement therapy and subsequently, before and after studies will be carried out for a select few who do commence dialysis in the study period. The process will entail quantitative methods and ethnographic interviews of all groups in the study. Data collection will involve clinical and biomarkers, psychosocial quantitative assessments and neuropsychometric tests in patients. Organizational attitudes and dialysis unit practices will be studied together with perceptions of healthcare providers on provision of home HD. Economic evaluation of home and hospital haemodialysis practices will also be undertaken and we will apply scenario ("what … if") analysis using system dynamics modeling to investigate the impact of different policy choices and financial models on dialysis technology adoption, care pathways and costs. Less attention is often given to the patient’s carers who provide informal support, often of a complex nature to patients afflicted by chronic ailments such as end stage kidney disease. Engaging the carers is fundamental to realizing the full benefits of a complex, home-based intervention and a qualitative study of the carers will be undertaken to elicit their fears, concerns and perception of home HD before and after patient’s commencement of the treatment. The data sets will be analysed independently and the findings will be mixed at the stage of interpretation to form a coherent message that will be informing practice in the future. DISCUSSION: The BASIC-HHD study is designed to assemble pivotal information on dialysis modality choice and uptake, investigating users, care-givers and care delivery processes and study their variation in a multi-layered analytical approach within a single health care system. The study results would define modality specific service and patient pathway redesign. STUDY REGISTRATION: This study has been reviewed and approved by the Greater Manchester West Health Research Authority National Research Ethics Service (NRES) The study is on the NIHR (CLRN) portfolio.
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spelling pubmed-38519852013-12-06 Barriers to successful implementation of care in home haemodialysis (BASIC-HHD):1. Study design, methods and rationale Jayanti, Anuradha Wearden, Alison J Morris, Julie Brenchley, Paul Abma, Inger Bayer, Steffen Barlow, James Mitra, Sandip BMC Nephrol Study Protocol BACKGROUND: Ten years on from the National Institute of Health and Clinical Excellence’ technology appraisal guideline on haemodialysis in 2002; the clinical community is yet to rise to the challenge of providing home haemodialysis (HHD) to 10-15% of the dialysis cohort. The renal registry report, suggests underutilization of a treatment type that has had a lot of research interest and several publications worldwide on its apparent benefit for both physical and mental health of patients. An understanding of the drivers to introducing and sustaining the modality, from organizational, economic, clinical and patient perspectives is fundamental to realizing the full benefits of the therapy with the potential to provide evidence base for effective care models. Through the BASIC-HHD study, we seek to understand the clinical, patient and carer related psychosocial, economic and organisational determinants of successful uptake and maintenance of home haemodialysis and thereby, engage all major stakeholders in the process. DESIGN AND METHODS: We have adopted an integrated mixed methodology (convergent, parallel design) for this study. The study arms include a. patient; b. organization; c. carer and d. economic evaluation. The three patient study cohorts (n = 500) include pre-dialysis patients (200), hospital haemodialysis (200) and home haemodialysis patients (100) from geographically distinct NHS sites, across the country and with variable prevalence of home haemodialysis. The pre-dialysis patients will also be prospectively followed up for a period of 12 months from study entry to understand their journey to renal replacement therapy and subsequently, before and after studies will be carried out for a select few who do commence dialysis in the study period. The process will entail quantitative methods and ethnographic interviews of all groups in the study. Data collection will involve clinical and biomarkers, psychosocial quantitative assessments and neuropsychometric tests in patients. Organizational attitudes and dialysis unit practices will be studied together with perceptions of healthcare providers on provision of home HD. Economic evaluation of home and hospital haemodialysis practices will also be undertaken and we will apply scenario ("what … if") analysis using system dynamics modeling to investigate the impact of different policy choices and financial models on dialysis technology adoption, care pathways and costs. Less attention is often given to the patient’s carers who provide informal support, often of a complex nature to patients afflicted by chronic ailments such as end stage kidney disease. Engaging the carers is fundamental to realizing the full benefits of a complex, home-based intervention and a qualitative study of the carers will be undertaken to elicit their fears, concerns and perception of home HD before and after patient’s commencement of the treatment. The data sets will be analysed independently and the findings will be mixed at the stage of interpretation to form a coherent message that will be informing practice in the future. DISCUSSION: The BASIC-HHD study is designed to assemble pivotal information on dialysis modality choice and uptake, investigating users, care-givers and care delivery processes and study their variation in a multi-layered analytical approach within a single health care system. The study results would define modality specific service and patient pathway redesign. STUDY REGISTRATION: This study has been reviewed and approved by the Greater Manchester West Health Research Authority National Research Ethics Service (NRES) The study is on the NIHR (CLRN) portfolio. BioMed Central 2013-09-17 /pmc/articles/PMC3851985/ /pubmed/24044499 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2369-14-197 Text en Copyright © 2013 Jayanti et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Study Protocol
Jayanti, Anuradha
Wearden, Alison J
Morris, Julie
Brenchley, Paul
Abma, Inger
Bayer, Steffen
Barlow, James
Mitra, Sandip
Barriers to successful implementation of care in home haemodialysis (BASIC-HHD):1. Study design, methods and rationale
title Barriers to successful implementation of care in home haemodialysis (BASIC-HHD):1. Study design, methods and rationale
title_full Barriers to successful implementation of care in home haemodialysis (BASIC-HHD):1. Study design, methods and rationale
title_fullStr Barriers to successful implementation of care in home haemodialysis (BASIC-HHD):1. Study design, methods and rationale
title_full_unstemmed Barriers to successful implementation of care in home haemodialysis (BASIC-HHD):1. Study design, methods and rationale
title_short Barriers to successful implementation of care in home haemodialysis (BASIC-HHD):1. Study design, methods and rationale
title_sort barriers to successful implementation of care in home haemodialysis (basic-hhd):1. study design, methods and rationale
topic Study Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3851985/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24044499
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2369-14-197
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