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Chronic kidney disease in an Aboriginal population: A nurse practitioner‐led approach to management
Author(s) -
Barrett Elizabeth,
Salem Lesley,
Wilson Sue,
O'Neill Claire,
Davis Kathleen,
Bagnulo Sharif
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
australian journal of rural health
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.48
H-Index - 49
eISSN - 1440-1584
pISSN - 1038-5282
DOI - 10.1111/ajr.12230
Subject(s) - kidney disease , medicine , referral , population , nephrology , family medicine , general partnership , health care , intensive care medicine , disease management , disease , nursing , environmental health , finance , parkinson's disease , economics , economic growth
Problem Chronic kidney disease ( CKD ) is a significant health problem impacting A ustralia's A boriginal and T orres S trait I slander population. After age adjustment, the prevalence of kidney disease is 3.7 times higher in A boriginal people and 7.3 times higher for end‐stage kidney disease compared with the wider population. Yet at an A boriginal C ommunity C ontrolled H ealth S ervice ( ACCHS ) with a significant patient population, fewer than expected numbers of A boriginal patients were identified with CKD . Design The ACCHS engaged a nurse practitioner to lead a systematic approach to the identification and treatment of CKD . Setting: This nurse practitioner‐led approach to CKD was developed and implemented at a rural NSW ACCHS , with the support of a partnership formed between the nurse practitioner, the ACCHS , a nephrologist from a referral hospital and a statewide NGO . Key measures for improvement The primary measure for improvement has been to identify and stage patients with CKD and establish management plans as appropriate. Strategies for change This nurse‐led project was established to: (i) identify patients with CKD ; (ii) provide access for CKD patients to appropriate services; (iii) commence pharmacological and non‐pharmacological strategies that enable remission or regression of CKD ; and (iv) educate practice GP s and other staff members on CKD clinical guidelines and best practice. Effects of change The CKD project has improved access to essential health care for vulnerable and at‐risk populations, with 187 patients to date having been identified with kidney disease and staged for its severity. Lessons learnt The need for strong multi‐disciplinary teamwork has been demonstrated with good communication strategies implemented.

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