• J Pain Symptom Manage · Jan 2021

    Psychological Adaptation to Serious Illness: A Qualitative Study of Culturally Diverse Patients with Advanced Chronic Kidney Disease.

    • Devika Nair, Kemberlee Bonnet, Marcus G Wild, Ebele M Umeukeje, Rachel B Fissell, Marquetta L Faulkner, Nader S Bahri, Marino A Bruce, David G Schlundt, Kenneth A Wallston, and Kerri L Cavanaugh.
    • Division of Nephrology and Hypertension, Department of Medicine, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Vanderbilt O'Brien Center for Kidney Disease, Nashville, Tennessee, USA. Electronic address: devika.nair@vumc.org.
    • J Pain Symptom Manage. 2021 Jan 1; 61 (1): 3241.e232-41.e2.

    ContextPsychological distress is associated with adverse health outcomes in serious illness and magnified among patients of low socioeconomic status. Aspects of one's culture, such as religion and spirituality, can influence these patients' coping response to distress. Advanced chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a serious illness that disproportionately affects patients of low socioeconomic status, but a theory-based understanding of this group's lived experience of CKD is lacking.ObjectivesWe explored the cognitions, emotions, and coping behaviors of patients with CKD with emphasis on those of low socioeconomic status. We further inquired into any influences of religion or spirituality.MethodsWe interviewed 50 English-speaking or Spanish-speaking adults with advanced CKD from three medical centers in Nashville, Tennessee. Analyses occurred with isolation of themes; development of a coding system; and creation of a conceptual framework using an inductive-deductive approach.ResultsMedian age was 65 years; median annual income was $17,500 per year; and 48% of participants had not progressed beyond high school. Key beliefs (awareness of mortality and lack of control) influenced patients' emotions (existential distress in the form of death anxiety, prognostic uncertainty, and hopelessness) and coping behaviors (acceptance, avoidance, emotion regulation via spirituality, and seeking socialsupport via a religious community).ConclusionIndividuals with advanced CKD and low socioeconomic status lack control over disease progression, experience death anxiety and existential distress, and emphasize spirituality to cope. Our study identifies novel components for a psychotherapeutic intervention for patients with advanced CKD at high risk for adverse health outcomes.Copyright © 2020 American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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