A RAND-Modified Delphi on Key Indicators to Measure the Efficiency of Living Kidney Donor Candidate Evaluations
Author(s) -
Steven Habbous,
Lianne Barnieh,
Kenneth Litchfield,
Susan McKenzie,
Marian Reich,
Ngan N. Lam,
István Mucsi,
Ann Bugeja,
Seychelle Yohanna,
Rahul Mainra,
Kate Chong,
Daniel Fantus,
G. V. Ramesh Prasad,
Christine Dipchand,
Jagbir Gill,
Leah Getchell,
Amit X. Garg
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
clinical journal of the american society of nephrology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.755
H-Index - 151
eISSN - 1555-905X
pISSN - 1555-9041
DOI - 10.2215/cjn.03780320
Subject(s) - medicine , delphi method , kidney transplantation , set (abstract data type) , health care , kidney transplant , family medicine , transplantation , computer science , surgery , artificial intelligence , economics , programming language , economic growth
Background and objectives Many patients, providers, and potential living donors perceive the living kidney donor evaluation process to be lengthy and difficult to navigate. Design, setting, participants, & measurements We sought consensus on key terms and process and outcome indicators that can be used to measure how efficiently a transplant center evaluates persons interested in becoming a living kidney donor. Using a RAND-modified Delphi method, 77 participants (kidney transplant recipients or recipient candidates, living kidney donors or donor candidates, health care providers, and health care administrators) completed an online survey to define the terms and indicators. The definitions were then further refined during an in-person meeting with ten stakeholders. Results We identified 16 process indicators ( e.g. , average time to evaluate a donor candidate), eight outcome indicators ( e.g. , annual number of preemptive living kidney donor transplants), and two measures that can be considered both process and outcome indicators ( e.g. , average number of times a candidate visited the transplant center for the evaluation). Transplant centers wishing to implement this set of indicators will require 22 unique data elements, all of which are either readily available or easily collected prospectively. Conclusions We identified a set of indicators through a consensus-based approach that may be used to monitor and improve the performance of a transplant center in how efficiently it evaluates persons interested in becoming a living kidney donor.
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