Integrating Patient Activation Into Dialysis Care

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Abstract

Patient activation, the measure of patients’ readiness and willingness to manage their own health care, is low among people receiving in-center hemodialysis, which is exacerbated because such centers are commonly set up for patients to passively receive care. In our pursuit of person-centered care and value-based medicine, enabling patients to take a more active role in their care can lead to healthy behaviors, with subsequent reductions in individual burden and costs to the health care system. To improve patient activation, we need to embrace a patient-first approach and combine it with ways to equip patients to thrive with self-management. This requires changes in the training of the health care team as well as changes in care delivery models, promoting interventions such as health coaching and peer mentoring, while leveraging technology to enable self-access to records, self-monitoring, and communication with providers. We also need health care policies that encourage a focus on patient-identified goals, including more attention to patient-reported outcomes. In this article, we review the current status of patient activation in dialysis patients, outline some of the available interventions, and propose steps to change the dynamics of the current system to move toward a more active role for patients in their care.

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APA

Hussein, W. F., Bennett, P. N., Abra, G., Watson, E., & Schiller, B. (2022). Integrating Patient Activation Into Dialysis Care. American Journal of Kidney Diseases, 79(1), 105–112. https://doi.org/10.1053/j.ajkd.2021.07.015

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