Dialysis care is often associated with poor outcomes including low quality of life (QOL). To improve patientreported outcomes, incorporation of the patient’s needs and perspective into the medical care they receive is essential. This article provides a framework to help clinicians integrate symptom assessment and other measures such as QOL and frailty scores into a clinical approach to the contemporary supportive care of patients with advanced CKD. This approach involves (1) defining our understanding of kidney supportive care, patient-centered dialysis, and palliative dialysis; (2) understanding and recognizing common symptoms associated with advanced CKD; (3) discussing the concepts of physical function, frailty, and QOL and their role in CKD; and (4) identifying the structural and process barriers that may arise when patient-centered dialysis is being introduced into clinical practice.
CITATION STYLE
Davison, S. N., & Jassal, S. V. (2016). Supportive care: Integration of patient-centered kidney care to manage symptoms and geriatric syndromes. Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, 11(10), 1882–1891. https://doi.org/10.2215/CJN.01050116
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