Video education to facilitate patient outreach about living kidney donation: A proof of concept

Background Increasing living‐donor kidney transplantation (LDKT) requires education of transplant candidates and their social network. This pre‐post study tested the feasibility and acceptability of KidneyTIME, an intervention which leverages LDKT video‐based educational content designed for sharing...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical transplantation 2021-12, Vol.35 (12), p.e14477-n/a
Hauptverfasser: Kayler, Liise K., Seibert, Rachel E., Dolph, Beth A., Keller, Maria M., Cadzow, Renee B., Nie, Jing, Noyes, Katia, Feeley, Thomas H.
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container_end_page n/a
container_issue 12
container_start_page e14477
container_title Clinical transplantation
container_volume 35
creator Kayler, Liise K.
Seibert, Rachel E.
Dolph, Beth A.
Keller, Maria M.
Cadzow, Renee B.
Nie, Jing
Noyes, Katia
Feeley, Thomas H.
description Background Increasing living‐donor kidney transplantation (LDKT) requires education of transplant candidates and their social network. This pre‐post study tested the feasibility and acceptability of KidneyTIME, an intervention which leverages LDKT video‐based educational content designed for sharing. Methods Adult kidney candidates undergoing transplant evaluation/re‐evaluation and their caregivers at a single transplant center viewed different sets of KidneyTIME videos prior to evaluation. Change in LDKT knowledge, self‐efficacy, and concerns was assessed before and immediately after exposure and 3 weeks later. Also assessed were post‐exposure program feedback, online use, and living donor (LD) inquiry. Results A total of 82 candidates and 79 caregivers participated. Viewers of KidneyTIME demonstrated increases in mean LDKT knowledge by +71% and communication self‐efficacy by +48%, and reductions in concerns by ‐21%. The intervention was received positively, with over 95% of participants agreeing that the videos were understandable, credible, and engaging. By 3 weeks follow‐up, 58% had viewed it again, 63% of family clusters had shared it, and 100% would recommend the program to a friend. Time to LD inquiry was similar to historic controls. Conclusion KidneyTime improved facilitators of LDKT, was rated as highly acceptable, and was highly shared, but did not impact LD inquiry during the COVID‐19 pandemic.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/ctr.14477
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This pre‐post study tested the feasibility and acceptability of KidneyTIME, an intervention which leverages LDKT video‐based educational content designed for sharing. Methods Adult kidney candidates undergoing transplant evaluation/re‐evaluation and their caregivers at a single transplant center viewed different sets of KidneyTIME videos prior to evaluation. Change in LDKT knowledge, self‐efficacy, and concerns was assessed before and immediately after exposure and 3 weeks later. Also assessed were post‐exposure program feedback, online use, and living donor (LD) inquiry. Results A total of 82 candidates and 79 caregivers participated. Viewers of KidneyTIME demonstrated increases in mean LDKT knowledge by +71% and communication self‐efficacy by +48%, and reductions in concerns by ‐21%. The intervention was received positively, with over 95% of participants agreeing that the videos were understandable, credible, and engaging. By 3 weeks follow‐up, 58% had viewed it again, 63% of family clusters had shared it, and 100% would recommend the program to a friend. Time to LD inquiry was similar to historic controls. Conclusion KidneyTime improved facilitators of LDKT, was rated as highly acceptable, and was highly shared, but did not impact LD inquiry during the COVID‐19 pandemic.</description><identifier>ISSN: 0902-0063</identifier><identifier>ISSN: 1399-0012</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 1399-0012</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.1111/ctr.14477</identifier><identifier>PMID: 34510545</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Denmark</publisher><subject>Adult ; animation ; COVID-19 ; health education ; Humans ; Kidney ; kidney transplant ; Kidney Transplantation ; living donor ; Living Donors ; Pandemics ; SARS-CoV-2</subject><ispartof>Clinical transplantation, 2021-12, Vol.35 (12), p.e14477-n/a</ispartof><rights>2021 John Wiley &amp; Sons A/S. 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This pre‐post study tested the feasibility and acceptability of KidneyTIME, an intervention which leverages LDKT video‐based educational content designed for sharing. Methods Adult kidney candidates undergoing transplant evaluation/re‐evaluation and their caregivers at a single transplant center viewed different sets of KidneyTIME videos prior to evaluation. Change in LDKT knowledge, self‐efficacy, and concerns was assessed before and immediately after exposure and 3 weeks later. Also assessed were post‐exposure program feedback, online use, and living donor (LD) inquiry. Results A total of 82 candidates and 79 caregivers participated. Viewers of KidneyTIME demonstrated increases in mean LDKT knowledge by +71% and communication self‐efficacy by +48%, and reductions in concerns by ‐21%. The intervention was received positively, with over 95% of participants agreeing that the videos were understandable, credible, and engaging. By 3 weeks follow‐up, 58% had viewed it again, 63% of family clusters had shared it, and 100% would recommend the program to a friend. Time to LD inquiry was similar to historic controls. 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This pre‐post study tested the feasibility and acceptability of KidneyTIME, an intervention which leverages LDKT video‐based educational content designed for sharing. Methods Adult kidney candidates undergoing transplant evaluation/re‐evaluation and their caregivers at a single transplant center viewed different sets of KidneyTIME videos prior to evaluation. Change in LDKT knowledge, self‐efficacy, and concerns was assessed before and immediately after exposure and 3 weeks later. Also assessed were post‐exposure program feedback, online use, and living donor (LD) inquiry. Results A total of 82 candidates and 79 caregivers participated. Viewers of KidneyTIME demonstrated increases in mean LDKT knowledge by +71% and communication self‐efficacy by +48%, and reductions in concerns by ‐21%. The intervention was received positively, with over 95% of participants agreeing that the videos were understandable, credible, and engaging. By 3 weeks follow‐up, 58% had viewed it again, 63% of family clusters had shared it, and 100% would recommend the program to a friend. Time to LD inquiry was similar to historic controls. Conclusion KidneyTime improved facilitators of LDKT, was rated as highly acceptable, and was highly shared, but did not impact LD inquiry during the COVID‐19 pandemic.</abstract><cop>Denmark</cop><pmid>34510545</pmid><doi>10.1111/ctr.14477</doi><tpages>10</tpages><orcidid>https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0476-5222</orcidid></addata></record>
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subjects Adult
animation
COVID-19
health education
Humans
Kidney
kidney transplant
Kidney Transplantation
living donor
Living Donors
Pandemics
SARS-CoV-2
title Video education to facilitate patient outreach about living kidney donation: A proof of concept
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