Dialysis providers' awareness of racial disparities in transplantation is low

In a recent study of dialysis facilities with low rates of waitlisting for transplantation, healthcare providers' awareness of racial disparities in kidney transplant waitlisting was low. The findings, which appear in an upcoming issue of the Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology (CJASN), point to the need for education and training for clinicians to improve equity in access to transplantation.

Kidney transplantation is the optimal treatment for most patients with kidney failure, but in access to transplantation have been well documented, with existing in all steps including referral for transplant evaluation, placement on the deceased donor waiting list, and receipt of a transplant.

Healthcare providers at dialysis facilities play an important role in reducing racial disparities in access to in the United States, but little is known about their awareness of these disparities. To investigate, a team led by Rachel Patzer, PhD, MPH (Emory University School of Medicine) analyzed information from a 2016 survey of providers from 655 low waitlisting dialysis facilities across all 18 End-Stage-Renal-Disease networks in the United States. The information was merged with 2014 United States Renal Data System and 2014 United States Census data.

Among 655 providers surveyed, 19% were aware of the national racial disparity in waitlisting: 50% (57/113) of , 11% (35/327) of nurse managers, and 16% (35/215) of other providers. In analyses adjusted for provider and facility characteristics, nurse managers (vs. medical directors) and white providers (vs. Black) were more likely to be unaware of a national racial disparity in waitlisting. Facilities in the South (vs. Northeast) and facilities with a low percentage of Blacks (vs. high) were more likely to be unaware. A quarter of facilities had >5% racial difference in waitlisting within their own facilities, but only 5% were aware of the disparity.

"Despite the influence that dialysis providers have in patients' decision-making process and in reducing barriers that contribute to racial disparities in kidney transplantation, this study suggests that many providers are unaware of these racial disparities," said Dr. Patzer. "As a result, they may not only be less compelled to implement interventions to address disparities, but can also unconsciously exacerbate the problem by failing to address the mechanisms through which they themselves can contribute to racial disparities in access to transplantation—such as provider bias and culturally incongruent care."

More information: "Awareness of Racial Disparities in Kidney Transplantation Among Healthcare Providers in Dialysis Facilities," Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology (2018). DOI: 10.2215/CJN.09920917

Citation: Dialysis providers' awareness of racial disparities in transplantation is low (2018, April 12) retrieved 28 March 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2018-04-dialysis-awareness-racial-disparities-transplantation.html
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