Ability to Work among Patients with ESKD: Relevance of Quality Care Metrics
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Prevalent ESKD Patients in the US
1.2. Work Ability and Employment among Persons with ESKD
1.3. Dialysis Care Quality Metrics
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Population
2.2. Measurement
2.3. Analysis
3. Results
4. Discussion
African-American Female Age 54 on In-center Hemodialysis |
Soon after she began dialysis, she “was thinking about retiring” because of the problems she was having with her vascular access. She “never knew when I would be in the hospital.” However, she “liked her job and didn’t want to stop working.” In fact, she “never thought much about not working. Only when I was being in the hospital so much, but it wasn’t because I didn’t want to work.” She was concerned about the work that was not getting done because of her frequent, unscheduled absences. But her doctor encouraged her not to quit. He said, “Go part-time if you feel too bad. It will keep you from getting depressed.” |
If she had worked in a stressful situation, she feels it would have made a difference, but her work atmosphere is not stressful. In fact, she said “they work around me.” She didn’t want to use her sick leave to go to dialysis. She leaves work early on Wednesdays so that she can dialyze and still go to her Wednesday evening church activities. Then she works one hour extra on Tuesdays and Thursdays to make up for leaving early on Wednesdays. On Mondays and Fridays, she works a full day before leaving for treatment. “So I don’t have to use leave.” |
Her doctor had initially wanted her on home dialysis, but she told him “that won’t work for me. I like being around people.” She enjoys the social aspects of her job and of the dialysis clinic: “I need a support group!” |
Summary of Study Participant Interview Comments (NIH grant R01-DK42949: Gender, Race, Age and ESRD Patients’ Quality of Life and Survival) |
5. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Clinical Measures | Kt/V adequacy |
Vascular access type | |
Hypercalcemia (calcium level) | |
Dialysis-related bloodstream infections | |
Standardized transfusion ratio | |
Standardized readmission ratio: readmissions within 30 days of an index discharge | |
Patient experience survey (ICH CAHPS) | |
Reporting Measures | Anemia: patient-specific hemoglobin + monthly ESA dosage (as applicable) |
Mineral metabolism (serum phosphorus level) | |
Depression | |
Pain | |
Healthcare personnel influenza vaccination |
Characteristics | Working-Age Study Cohort (n = 528) |
---|---|
Age in years, mean (S.D.) | 50.3 (10.4) |
Male, % | 62.3 |
Black, % | 66.5 |
At least high school education, % | 77.7 |
Diabetes, % | 34.1 |
Congestive heart failure, % | 16.3 |
ESKD treatment in years, median (range) | 3.4 (0.1, 36.6) |
QIP Targets | Ability to Work Reported Yes (n = 189) No (n = 339) | p | |
---|---|---|---|
Kt/V ≥ 1.2, % | 92.1 | 90.0 | NS |
Hemoglobin 10–12 g/dL, % | 60.9 | 59.0 | NS |
Serum phosphorus mg/dL, % | 48.2 | 50.2 | NS |
No catheter in use for vascular access, % | 84.7 | 73.8 | 0.004 |
CES-D score ≥ 18, % | 18.6 | 31.6 | 0.001 |
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Kutner, N.G.; Zhang, R. Ability to Work among Patients with ESKD: Relevance of Quality Care Metrics. Healthcare 2017, 5, 42. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare5030042
Kutner NG, Zhang R. Ability to Work among Patients with ESKD: Relevance of Quality Care Metrics. Healthcare. 2017; 5(3):42. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare5030042
Chicago/Turabian StyleKutner, Nancy G., and Rebecca Zhang. 2017. "Ability to Work among Patients with ESKD: Relevance of Quality Care Metrics" Healthcare 5, no. 3: 42. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare5030042
APA StyleKutner, N. G., & Zhang, R. (2017). Ability to Work among Patients with ESKD: Relevance of Quality Care Metrics. Healthcare, 5(3), 42. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare5030042