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Kidney Transplant Evaluation and Listing: Development and Preliminary Evaluation of Multimedia Education for Patients
Author(s) -
Liise K. Kayler,
Beth Dolph,
Molly Ranahan,
Maria Keller,
Renée Cadzow,
Thomas Hugh Feeley
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
annals of transplantation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.494
H-Index - 38
eISSN - 2329-0358
pISSN - 1425-9524
DOI - 10.12659/aot.929839
Subject(s) - medicine , listing (finance) , dialysis , transplantation , kidney transplantation , intervention (counseling) , general partnership , patient education , animation , family medicine , nursing , computer graphics (images) , computer science , finance , economics
Background Patient knowledge gaps about the evaluation and waitlisting process for kidney transplantation lead to delayed and incomplete testing, which compromise transplant access. We aimed to develop and evaluate a novel video education approach to empower patients to proceed with the transplant evaluation and listing process and to increase their knowledge and motivation. Material/Methods We developed 2 theory-informed educational animations about the kidney transplantation evaluation and listing process with input from experts in transplantation and communication, 20 candidates/recipients, 5 caregivers, 1 anthropologist, 3 community advocates, and 36 dialysis or transplant providers. We then conducted an online pre-post study with 28 kidney transplantation candidates to measure the acceptability and feasibility of the 2 videos to improve patients’ evaluation and listing knowledge, understanding, and concerns. Results Compared with before intervention, the mean knowledge score increased after intervention by 38% (5.7 to 7.9; P<0.001). Increases in knowledge effect size were large across age group, health literacy, education, technology access, and duration of pretransplant dialysis. The proportion of positive responses increased from before to after animation viewing for understanding the evaluation process (25% to 61%; P=0.002) and waitlist placement (32% to 86%; P<0.001). Concerns about list placement decreased (32% to 7%; P=0.039). After viewing the animations, >90% of responses indicated positive ratings on trusting the information, comfort level with learning, and engagement. Conclusions In partnership with stakeholders, we developed 2 educational animations about kidney transplant evaluation and listing that were positively received by patients and have the potential to improve patient knowledge and understanding and reduce patient concerns.

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