Por favor, use este identificador para citar o enlazar este ítem:
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12008/53313
Cómo citar
| Título: | Nephrologists’ perspectives on the impact of COVID-19 on caring for patients undergoing dialysis in Latin America: a qualitative study |
| Autor: | Matus Gonzalez, Andrea Lorca, Eduardo Cabrera, Sebastián Hernández, Alejandra Zúñiga- Sm, Carlos Sola, Laura Michea, Luis Ferreiro Fuentes, Alejandro Cervantes, Lilia Madero, Magdalena Teixeira- Pinto, Armando Wong, Germaine Craig, Jonathan Jaure, Allison |
| Tipo: | Artículo |
| Palabras clave: | COVID-19, Chronic renal failure, Dialysis, Qualitative research |
| Descriptores: | DIÁLISIS RENAL, INVESTIGACIÓN CUALITATIVA, MANEJO DE ATENCIÓN AL PACIENTE, PANDEMIAS, NEFRÓLOGOS |
| Fecha de publicación: | 2023 |
| Resumen: | Objective: To describe the experiences of nephrologists on caring for patients undergoing in-centre haemodialysis during the COVID-19 pandemic in Latin America. Design: Twenty-five semistructured interviews were conducted by Zoom videoconference in English and Spanish languages during 2020 until data saturation. Using thematic analysis, we conducted line-by-line coding to inductively identify themes. Setting: 25 centres across nine countries in Latin America. Participants: Nephrologists (17 male and 8 female) were purposively sampled to include diverse demographic characteristics and clinical experience. Results: We identified five themes: shock and immediate mobilisation for preparedness (overwhelmed and distressed, expanding responsibilities to manage COVID-19 infection and united for workforce resilience); personal vulnerability (being infected with COVID-19 and fear of transmitting COVID-19 to family); infrastructural susceptibility of dialysis units (lacking resources and facilities for quarantine, struggling to prevent cross-contamination, and depletion of personal protective equipment and cleaning supplies); helplessness and moral distress (being forced to ration life-sustaining equipment and care, being concerned about delayed and shortened dialysis sessions, patient hesitancy to attend to dialysis sessions, being grieved by socioeconomic disparities, deterioration of patients with COVID-19, harms of isolation and inability to provide kidney replacement therapy); and fostering innovative delivery of care (expanding use of telehealth, increasing uptake of PD and shifting focus on preventing syndemics). Conclusion: Nephrologists felt personally and professionally vulnerable and reported feeling helpless and morally distressed because they doubted their capacity to provide safe care for patients undergoing dialysis. Better availability and mobilisation of resources and capacities to adapt models of care, including telehealth and home-based dialysis, are urgently needed. |
| Editorial: | BMJ Publishing Group |
| EN: | BMJ Open. 2023;13(5) |
| Citación: | Matus Gonzalez A, Lorca E, Cabrera S y otros. Nephrologists’ perspectives on the impact of COVID-19 on caring for patients undergoing dialysis in Latin America: a qualitative study. BMJ Open [en línea]. 2023;13(5). 9 p. |
| Cobertura geográfica: | AMÉRICA LATINA |
| Licencia: | Licencia Creative Commons Atribución - No Comercial (CC - By-NC 4.0) |
| Aparece en las colecciones: | Publicaciones Académicas y Científicas - Facultad de Medicina |
Ficheros en este ítem:
| Fichero | Descripción | Tamaño | Formato | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nephrologists perspectives on the impact of COVID 19.pdf | Nephrologists perspectives on the impact of COVID 19 | 533,12 kB | Adobe PDF | Visualizar/Abrir |
Este ítem está sujeto a una licencia Creative Commons Licencia Creative Commons