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Decision Support for the Renal Replacement Therapy With End-stage Renal Disease

Primary Purpose

Chronic Renal Disease

Status
Completed
Phase
Not Applicable
Locations
Taiwan
Study Type
Interventional
Intervention
decision support intervention
Sponsored by
National Taipei University of Nursing and Health Sciences
About
Eligibility
Locations
Arms
Outcomes
Full info

About this trial

This is an interventional supportive care trial for Chronic Renal Disease focused on measuring Chronic Renal Diseases, Decision-making

Eligibility Criteria

20 Years - undefined (Adult, Older Adult)All SexesAccepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion conditions:

  1. The fifth stage of chronic renal failure diagnosed by a physician.
  2. The physician advises and informs the patient who has to undergo renal replacement therapy but has not yet decided what treatment to take.
  3. Being able to communicate in Mandarin and Taiwan.
  4. Ages over 20 years old.

Exclusion conditions:

  1. Cognitive impairment: The MMSE of the above-mentioned educators was 26 points, and the national minimum was < 21 points, those who are not educated are <16 points, and the case is excluded.
  2. Patients who have received non-emergency dialysis treatment.
  3. Patients with severe cardiopulmonary dysfunction, severe shock, low blood pressure, and large bleeding are not controlled.
  4. Patients with chronic active hepatitis, cirrhosis or liver failure.
  5. A history of cancer that may be transferred.
  6. Severe bleeding tendency.
  7. Loss of peritoneal function or extensive peritoneal adhesion, unable to use peritoneal dialysis.
  8. Unable to correct physiological defects, may interfere with peritoneal dialysis, or increase the chance of infection, such as umbilical hernia.
  9. The patient is unable to operate the fluid change, hand shake, and no family members can assist.
  10. Patients who are blind, have poor eyesight, and have difficulty operating.

Sites / Locations

  • Tri-Service General Hospital, National Defense Medical Center

Arms of the Study

Arm 1

Arm 2

Arm Type

Experimental

No Intervention

Arm Label

decision support intervention

routine care

Arm Description

The intervention measures in this study were discussed with the nephrologist and CKD health teachers. Based on theoretical considerations, the experimental group provides decision support. Measures, including CKD Guardian as a decision-maker, and the use of e-book software to develop medical decision-assist tools, and the application and decision-making mode complemented by introduction and selection, including team discussions, option discussions, and decision-making conversations. The control group is introduced with traditional care instructions for routine care. The experimental group and the control group were referred to the CKD health teacher for the introduction of renal replacement therapy by the physician. The experimental group was guided by CKD Health Education to guide the patients to participate in the discussion, discuss the advantages and disadvantages of each treatment and guide patients to explore preferences. And value, supplemented by discussion and final decision.

According to the nursing routine provide paper education.

Outcomes

Primary Outcome Measures

Control Preferences Scale
The control preferences construct is defined as "the degree of control an individual wants to assume when decisions are being made about medical treatment." The CPS consists of five cards that each portrays a different role in treatment decision-making using a statement and a cartoon. A and B represent the individual making the treatment decisions, C represent the individual making the decisions jointly with the physician, and D and E represent the physician making the decisions.
Scale of knowledge
To measure the patient's relevant disease knowledge, dialysis modalities and items that should be tracked over time. The scale mainly applied a dichotomy response (right/wrong), but to prevent patient guessing, add the choice of 'I don't know' as well. There are 20 questions in total with a total possible score ranging from 0-20. The higher the subject's score, the more knowledge he/she was presumed to possess.
Decision Self-Efficacy: Decision Self-Efficacy Scale
Using the Decision Self-Efficacy Scale developed by O'Connor (1995) to measure self-confidence or belief in decision-making ability, including joint decision making, the scale has a total of 11 questions, 0-4 points. Scored by 5 points, 0 points means no confidence at all, and 4 points means very confident. In order to help explain the score more easily, the scale multiplies the score by 25, and the score ranges from 0 (nothing at all). Confidence) to 100 points (very confident). The 0 point is expressed as "very low self-efficacy" and the 100 points means "very high self-efficacy" (O'Connor, 1995). The internal consistency of the scale is 0.92 with a correlation with the knowledge (r = 0.47) and support (r = 0.45).
Decisional Conflict
A total of 16 questions, 5 points method Sub-(0-4), which is used to measure the decision-making disturbances of patients involved in treatment decision-making, including uncertainty, feelings, lack of relevant information, unclear personal values, feelings of lack of support, and decision satisfaction. Table (O'Connor, 1995). The summary score is converted to 0-100 points. According to the manual, the higher the total score, the higher the decision-making trouble, and the score greater than 37.5 is the relevant decision delay. The scale was originally used in patients who received influenza vaccine or breast cancer screening. The decision was made on whether or not to treat 909 patients. The internal consistency coefficient of the scale ranged from 0.78 to 0.92 with good reliability and validity. O'Connor, 1995).

Secondary Outcome Measures

Decisional Satisfaction: Satisfaction with Decision (SWD)
It is proposed to adopt the Satisfaction with Decision (SWD) developed by Holmes-Rovner (1996) for a total of 6 questions, mainly to discuss the patient's subjective feelings of participation in the decision-making process, 5 points (1-5) The scores of each question are summed up and then averaged. The higher the score, the higher the satisfaction of the decision. This scale has been widely used by international scholars to assess the satisfaction of menopausal women in receiving hormonal treatment decisions with good reliability (Cronbach's alpha = 0.86) (Holmes-Rovner et al., 1996). Since there is no Chinese version of this scale, it is expected to be translated by the original author. After translation into the Chinese version of the scale, 8-10 patients will be pre-tested to understand the language readability of the scale to confirm the final Chinese version.
Decisional Regret
A total of 5 questions, the decision-making regret scale measures pain or regret after a medical decision. It mainly discusses the negative psychological feelings of patients who participate in the treatment decision-making process and related results. 5-point scoring (1-5), in which the second and fourth questions are reverse questions, and the average score after summing the questions is obtained. After subtracting 1 and multiplying by 25, the score range of 0-100 is obtained. Higher scores indicate a higher level of regret (O'Connor, 1996). This scale has been translated into multiple languages and is available in Chinese for breast cancer patients. The original scale was determined by the medical decision-making psychological test test tool reliability, showing its internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha) = 0.81 to 0.92, and Spearman's correlation and DCS correlation score was (rS = .56, p <.0001) (Brehaut et Al., 2003)

Full Information

First Posted
April 16, 2019
Last Updated
August 30, 2021
Sponsor
National Taipei University of Nursing and Health Sciences
Collaborators
Tri-Service General Hospital
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1. Study Identification

Unique Protocol Identification Number
NCT03921437
Brief Title
Decision Support for the Renal Replacement Therapy With End-stage Renal Disease
Official Title
The Efficacy of a Decision Support Intervention on Reducing Conflict and Improving Satisfaction in Making the Renal Replacement Therapy Decision Among Patients With End-stage Renal Disease
Study Type
Interventional

2. Study Status

Record Verification Date
August 2021
Overall Recruitment Status
Completed
Study Start Date
April 18, 2019 (Actual)
Primary Completion Date
January 28, 2020 (Actual)
Study Completion Date
January 28, 2020 (Actual)

3. Sponsor/Collaborators

Responsible Party, by Official Title
Principal Investigator
Name of the Sponsor
National Taipei University of Nursing and Health Sciences
Collaborators
Tri-Service General Hospital

4. Oversight

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product
No
Data Monitoring Committee
No

5. Study Description

Brief Summary
Patients often need more comprehensive information and clearer communication in order to to understand the complications, risks, cost and impacts on life quality associated with different treatment options. The purpose of this study is to investigate the efficacy of a decision support intervention on reducing conflict and improving satisfaction in making the renal replacement therapy decision among patients with end-stage renal disease. This study will be a randomized controlled trail. They will be randomly assigned to the experimental or the control group. Participants in the experimental group will receive the decision support intervention provided by the patient educators through using a decision support tool. The control participants will receive the routine care. Independent t-tests will be used to analyze between-group differences in autonomy preference index, renal replacement therapy knowledge, decision self-efficacy, decision conflict, decision regret, and decision satisfaction at different data collection points.Generalized Estimating Equations will be used to analyze between group differences in the changes of renal replacement therapy knowledge, decision self-efficacy, and decision conflict across time.
Detailed Description
I. Research object: In the outpatient department of a medical center in a medical center in the north, the case was collected, and the sample was selected conveniently. The patients who met the following sample selection conditions were selected, and 128 patients who agreed to participate in the study and filled out the consent form were studied by Random Allocation. The software software generates a random assignment list, which is then assigned to the experimental group and the control group. 2.The number of samples is calculated The number of samples required is calculated by G power (version 3.1.9.2) statistical software (Faul, Erdfelder, Buchner, & Lang, 2009), and the repeated measures ANOVA of the F test is used to compare the difference between the two groups (between factors) due to lack of intervention. The reference data of the effect size of the measure, the estimated measure should be moderately beneficial for the degree of decision-making, so according to the cohen's rule (Cohen, 1988) f2 is 0.30, the significant level α is 0.05, and the statistical power value is 0.05. It is 0.80, repeated measurement 3 times, the correlation between repeated measurements is 0.5, the total number of samples is estimated to be 86, each group is 43, and in addition, in order to make the secondary effect variable, there are enough samples, and consider The exit and omission values were about 20%. Therefore, 128 end-stage renal patients were selected from the hospital outpatient nephrology case management database. About 64 people in the experimental group and the control group participated in the study. 3. Intervention measures The intervention measures in this study were discussed with the nephrologist and CKD health teachers. Based on theoretical considerations, both the experimental group and the control group can accept the introduction and selection of renal replacement therapy, but the decision support measures are different, and the experimental group provides decision support. Measures include the use of CKD Guardian as a decision-maker and the development of medical decision aids by e-book software, and the application and decision-directed model complemented by introduction and selection. The implementation steps include team discussion, option discussion and decision making. The conversation is conducted while the control group is introduced with traditional care care.

6. Conditions and Keywords

Primary Disease or Condition Being Studied in the Trial, or the Focus of the Study
Chronic Renal Disease
Keywords
Chronic Renal Diseases, Decision-making

7. Study Design

Primary Purpose
Supportive Care
Study Phase
Not Applicable
Interventional Study Model
Parallel Assignment
Model Description
A random 1:1 assignment was made using a random number table to generate a sequence, and the participants were randomly divided into an experimental group and a control group.
Masking
Outcomes Assessor
Masking Description
Adopting the method of unnamed, the analysis uses de-named coding, who will not know who the respondent is.
Allocation
Randomized
Enrollment
76 (Actual)

8. Arms, Groups, and Interventions

Arm Title
decision support intervention
Arm Type
Experimental
Arm Description
The intervention measures in this study were discussed with the nephrologist and CKD health teachers. Based on theoretical considerations, the experimental group provides decision support. Measures, including CKD Guardian as a decision-maker, and the use of e-book software to develop medical decision-assist tools, and the application and decision-making mode complemented by introduction and selection, including team discussions, option discussions, and decision-making conversations. The control group is introduced with traditional care instructions for routine care. The experimental group and the control group were referred to the CKD health teacher for the introduction of renal replacement therapy by the physician. The experimental group was guided by CKD Health Education to guide the patients to participate in the discussion, discuss the advantages and disadvantages of each treatment and guide patients to explore preferences. And value, supplemented by discussion and final decision.
Arm Title
routine care
Arm Type
No Intervention
Arm Description
According to the nursing routine provide paper education.
Intervention Type
Radiation
Intervention Name(s)
decision support intervention
Other Intervention Name(s)
routine care
Intervention Description
CKD Guardian is the decision-maker and uses the e-book software to develop medical decision-assist tools, and applies this tool and decision-directed mode to introduce and select. The implementation steps include team discussion, option discussion and decision-making. The group is introduced with traditional care instructions for routine care.
Primary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Control Preferences Scale
Description
The control preferences construct is defined as "the degree of control an individual wants to assume when decisions are being made about medical treatment." The CPS consists of five cards that each portrays a different role in treatment decision-making using a statement and a cartoon. A and B represent the individual making the treatment decisions, C represent the individual making the decisions jointly with the physician, and D and E represent the physician making the decisions.
Time Frame
10 minutes
Title
Scale of knowledge
Description
To measure the patient's relevant disease knowledge, dialysis modalities and items that should be tracked over time. The scale mainly applied a dichotomy response (right/wrong), but to prevent patient guessing, add the choice of 'I don't know' as well. There are 20 questions in total with a total possible score ranging from 0-20. The higher the subject's score, the more knowledge he/she was presumed to possess.
Time Frame
10 minutes
Title
Decision Self-Efficacy: Decision Self-Efficacy Scale
Description
Using the Decision Self-Efficacy Scale developed by O'Connor (1995) to measure self-confidence or belief in decision-making ability, including joint decision making, the scale has a total of 11 questions, 0-4 points. Scored by 5 points, 0 points means no confidence at all, and 4 points means very confident. In order to help explain the score more easily, the scale multiplies the score by 25, and the score ranges from 0 (nothing at all). Confidence) to 100 points (very confident). The 0 point is expressed as "very low self-efficacy" and the 100 points means "very high self-efficacy" (O'Connor, 1995). The internal consistency of the scale is 0.92 with a correlation with the knowledge (r = 0.47) and support (r = 0.45).
Time Frame
10 minutes
Title
Decisional Conflict
Description
A total of 16 questions, 5 points method Sub-(0-4), which is used to measure the decision-making disturbances of patients involved in treatment decision-making, including uncertainty, feelings, lack of relevant information, unclear personal values, feelings of lack of support, and decision satisfaction. Table (O'Connor, 1995). The summary score is converted to 0-100 points. According to the manual, the higher the total score, the higher the decision-making trouble, and the score greater than 37.5 is the relevant decision delay. The scale was originally used in patients who received influenza vaccine or breast cancer screening. The decision was made on whether or not to treat 909 patients. The internal consistency coefficient of the scale ranged from 0.78 to 0.92 with good reliability and validity. O'Connor, 1995).
Time Frame
10 minutes
Secondary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Decisional Satisfaction: Satisfaction with Decision (SWD)
Description
It is proposed to adopt the Satisfaction with Decision (SWD) developed by Holmes-Rovner (1996) for a total of 6 questions, mainly to discuss the patient's subjective feelings of participation in the decision-making process, 5 points (1-5) The scores of each question are summed up and then averaged. The higher the score, the higher the satisfaction of the decision. This scale has been widely used by international scholars to assess the satisfaction of menopausal women in receiving hormonal treatment decisions with good reliability (Cronbach's alpha = 0.86) (Holmes-Rovner et al., 1996). Since there is no Chinese version of this scale, it is expected to be translated by the original author. After translation into the Chinese version of the scale, 8-10 patients will be pre-tested to understand the language readability of the scale to confirm the final Chinese version.
Time Frame
10 minutes
Title
Decisional Regret
Description
A total of 5 questions, the decision-making regret scale measures pain or regret after a medical decision. It mainly discusses the negative psychological feelings of patients who participate in the treatment decision-making process and related results. 5-point scoring (1-5), in which the second and fourth questions are reverse questions, and the average score after summing the questions is obtained. After subtracting 1 and multiplying by 25, the score range of 0-100 is obtained. Higher scores indicate a higher level of regret (O'Connor, 1996). This scale has been translated into multiple languages and is available in Chinese for breast cancer patients. The original scale was determined by the medical decision-making psychological test test tool reliability, showing its internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha) = 0.81 to 0.92, and Spearman's correlation and DCS correlation score was (rS = .56, p <.0001) (Brehaut et Al., 2003)
Time Frame
10 minutes

10. Eligibility

Sex
All
Minimum Age & Unit of Time
20 Years
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion conditions: The fifth stage of chronic renal failure diagnosed by a physician. The physician advises and informs the patient who has to undergo renal replacement therapy but has not yet decided what treatment to take. Being able to communicate in Mandarin and Taiwan. Ages over 20 years old. Exclusion conditions: Cognitive impairment: The MMSE of the above-mentioned educators was 26 points, and the national minimum was < 21 points, those who are not educated are <16 points, and the case is excluded. Patients who have received non-emergency dialysis treatment. Patients with severe cardiopulmonary dysfunction, severe shock, low blood pressure, and large bleeding are not controlled. Patients with chronic active hepatitis, cirrhosis or liver failure. A history of cancer that may be transferred. Severe bleeding tendency. Loss of peritoneal function or extensive peritoneal adhesion, unable to use peritoneal dialysis. Unable to correct physiological defects, may interfere with peritoneal dialysis, or increase the chance of infection, such as umbilical hernia. The patient is unable to operate the fluid change, hand shake, and no family members can assist. Patients who are blind, have poor eyesight, and have difficulty operating.
Overall Study Officials:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Tasw Jyy Wang, PhD
Organizational Affiliation
National Taipei University of Nursing and Health Sciences
Official's Role
Principal Investigator
Facility Information:
Facility Name
Tri-Service General Hospital, National Defense Medical Center
City
Taipei
ZIP/Postal Code
886
Country
Taiwan

12. IPD Sharing Statement

Plan to Share IPD
No
Citations:
Citation
AHRQ. (2016). The Share Approach-Health Literacy and Shared Decision Making: A Reference Guide for Health Care Providers. Retrieved from http://www.ahrq.gov/professionals/ education/curriculum-tools/ Shared decision making/tools/tool-4/index.html
Results Reference
background
PubMed Identifier
27461186
Citation
Chang YT, Hwang JS, Hung SY, Tsai MS, Wu JL, Sung JM, Wang JD. Cost-effectiveness of hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis: A national cohort study with 14 years follow-up and matched for comorbidities and propensity score. Sci Rep. 2016 Jul 27;6:30266. doi: 10.1038/srep30266.
Results Reference
background
PubMed Identifier
27681338
Citation
Lin ML, Huang CT, Chen CH. Reasons for family involvement in elective surgical decision-making in Taiwan: a qualitative study. J Clin Nurs. 2017 Jul;26(13-14):1969-1977. doi: 10.1111/jocn.13600. Epub 2016 Dec 18.
Results Reference
background

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Decision Support for the Renal Replacement Therapy With End-stage Renal Disease

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