Article
Characterizing Approaches to Dialysis Decision Making
with Older Adults
A Qualitative Study of Nephrologists
Keren Ladin ,1,2 Renuka Pandya,2 Ronald D. Perrone,3 Klemens B. Meyer
Tira Oskoui,2 Daniel E. Weiner,3 and John B. Wong3
,3 Allison Kannam,2 Rohini Loke,2
1
Abstract
Background and objectives Despite guidelines recommending shared decision making, nephrologists vary
significantly in their approaches to discussing conservative management for kidney replacement therapy with
older patients. Many older patients do not perceive dialysis initiation as a choice or receive sufficient information
about conservative management for reasons incompletely understood. We examined how nephrologists’
perceptions of key outcomes and successful versus failed treatment discussions shape their approach and
characterized different models of decision making, patient engagement, and conservative management
discussion.
Design, setting, participants, & measurements Our qualitative study used semistructured interviews with a sample
of purposively sampled nephrologists. Interviews were conducted from June 2016 to May 2017 and continued until
thematic saturation. Data were analyzed using typological and thematic analyses.
Results Among 35 nephrologists from 18 practices, 20% were women, 66% had at least 10 years of nephrology
experience, and 80% were from academic medical centers. Four distinct approaches to decision making emerged:
paternalist, informative (patient led), interpretive (navigator), and institutionalist. Five themes characterized
differences between these approaches, including patient autonomy, engagement and deliberation (disclosing all
options, presenting options neutrally, eliciting patient values, and offering explicit treatment recommendation),
influence of institutional norms, importance of clinical outcomes (e.g., survival and dialysis initiation), and
physician role (educating patients, making decisions, pursuing active therapies, and managing symptoms).
Paternalists and institutionalists viewed initiation of dialysis as a measure of success, whereas interpretive and
informative nephrologists focused on patient engagement, quality of life, and aligning patient values with
treatment. In this sample, only one third of providers presented conservative management to patients, all of whom
followed either informative or interpretive approaches. The interpretive model best achieved shared decision
making.
Department of
Occupational Therapy
and 2Research on
Aging, Ethics, and
Community Health,
Tufts University,
Medford,
Massachusetts; and
3
Department of
Medicine, Tufts
Medical Center,
Boston, Massachusetts
Correspondence:
Dr. Keren Ladin,
Department of
Occupational
Therapy, Tufts
University, Second
Floor, 574 Boston
Avenue, Medford, MA
02215. Email: keren.
ladin@tufts.edu
Conclusions Differences in nephrologists’ perceptions of their role, patient autonomy, and successful versus
unsuccessful encounters contribute to variation in decision making for patients with kidney disease.
Clin J Am Soc Nephrol 13: 1188–1196, 2018. doi: https://doi.org/10.2215/CJN.01740218
Introduction
Older adults begin dialysis more frequently than any
other group in the United States, yet some regret
initiating dialysis (1–3). For many patients with CKD
over age 75 years old, dialysis may not confer a
significant survival benefit over conservative management while increasing utilization of intensive endof-life care and potentially adversely affecting quality
of life (4–7). Most patients are more satisfied when
engaged in decision making, and clinical guidelines
encourage shared decision making with older patients
(2,3,8–10). However, many nephrologists do not routinely discuss conservative management and may
actively promote dialysis (11,12). Consequently, some
patients do not perceive dialysis initiation as their
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Copyright © 2018 by the American Society of Nephrology
choice (3,13–15). Better understanding factors differentiating nephrologists who do and do not engage in
shared decision making and discuss conservative management is needed to improve quality care for older
patients with CKD (16–20).
In their seminal paper, Emanuel and Emanuel (21)
proposed four models of physician-patient decision
making emphasizing different roles. The paternalist
model highlights physicians’ expertise and role in
determining treatment, incorporating less input
from patients. In the informative model, as technical
experts, physicians inform patients of options and
implications without influencing treatment choice.
In the interpretive model, physician-patient interactions clarify patients’ self-identified values, with
www.cjasn.org Vol 13 August, 2018
Clin J Am Soc Nephrol 13: 1188–1196, August, 2018
physicians then guiding patients toward treatments aligned
with their values. In the deliberative model, physicians
suggest why certain values are more important in treatment
selection (21). These models may help explain variation in
clinical care but have not been examined in the nephrology
context, where these models may be present or others may
emerge.
Using nephrologists’ in-depth accounts of interactions
with older patients and drawing on the well established
typology of Emanuel and Emanuel (21), we qualitatively
characterize approaches to decision making and clarify how
these relate to variation in conservative management discussions. Characterizing a typology of approaches to decisionmaking discussions may help nephrologists better understand
and overcome challenges unique to their approach.
Approaches to Decision Making with Older Patients, Ladin et al.
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initial transcripts and an additional four transcripts. After
iterative deliberation yielded consensus, the finalized codebook was applied to all transcripts using NVivo (version
11; QSR International). Codes were organized into themes
through a consensus process using pattern and focused coding to capture the range and variability of subthemes and
characterize both confirmatory and contradictory narratives
(30). In a final stage, reflecting on the typology and framework of Emanuel and Emanuel (21), researchers reread
interviews and created data matrices integrating themes,
yielding an initial typology of nephrologists. To validate
the typology, we carefully reviewed participants’ fit within
a model and checked for conflicting features. Model refinement continued through deliberative consensus until
each nephrologist could be assigned into one predominant
model (25).
Materials and Methods
To explore factors influencing nephrologists’ approaches
to care discussions with older patients and their beliefs and
practices regarding shared decision making and conservative management, a qualitative researcher with expertise
in kidney disease (K.L.) and a nephrologist (D.E.W.) developed the semistructured interview guide (3,22). Responding to open-ended questions, nephrologists reflected on
successful and failed clinical encounters and described
how their decision-making approach evolved, allowing for
domains central to the framework by Emanuel and Emanuel
(21) to emerge while not constraining responses to this
framework. After informing participants about study goals
and researchers’ interest in the topic and obtaining verbal
informed consent, K.L., R.P., and A.K. conducted interviews
from June 2016 to May 2017 in person or by phone.
Interviews were audiotaped and transcribed verbatim.
Study reporting reflects Consolidated Criteria for Reporting
Qualitative Health Research (23). The Tufts University
Institutional Review Board approved this study.
Participant Selection
Starting from a list of nephrology practices compiled
by three nephrologists (R.D.P., K.B.M., and D.E.W.),
the qualitative team purposively sampled (sex, years in
practice, practice type, and region) to capture a range of
perspectives and experiences, including some with a national reputation in geriatric nephrology (24,25). Snowball sampling, in which participants recommended other
nephrologists from their center, was also used (25). Interviewers did not have preexisting relationships with participants. Sampling continued until thematic saturation and
sufficient variation were achieved and confirmed through
deliberation (25).
Analyses
Typological analysis is a theory-driven methodology that
differentiates members of a group by their distinct approaches to a given phenomenon, such as clinical decision
making (26). Using typological and thematic approaches
(25,27,28), K.L. and R.P. created a preliminary codebook on
the basis of the interview structure. The qualitative team
(K.L., R.P., A.K., R.L., and T.O.) independently coded the
first three transcripts line by line, allowing for emergent
codes (29). The codebook was revised and reapplied to
Results
Thirty-five nephrologists from 18 centers in nine states
completed semistructured interviews lasting 36611 minutes (Table 1); 20% were women, 66% had at least 10 years
of nephrology experience, and 80% practiced at academic
medical centers.
Our typology identified four distinct approaches to decision making and conservative management: paternalist,
informative (patient led), interpretive (navigator), and
institutionalist. The first three models echoed those proposed by Emanuel and Emanuel (21), whereas a fourth
emerged, clarifying nephrologists’ role of caring for patients in the context of stewardship of institutional resources and policies. We did not find evidence for the
deliberative model of Emanuel and Emanuel (21): no
participant described discussing the importance of certain
values over others.
Five emergent themes characterized differences among
the approaches: patient autonomy, engagement and deliberation (disclosing all options, presenting options neutrally, eliciting patient preferences, and offering explicit
treatment recommendation), influence of institutional
norms, importance of clinical outcomes (e.g., dialysis access
or initiation), and physician role (educating patients, making decisions, pursuing active therapies, and managing
symptoms) (Table 2).
Across models, most nephrologists supported shared
decision making but varied in their interpretation and
implementation. Only one third of participants routinely
discussed conservative management; they followed either
informative or interpretive models. In all models, nephrologists ascribed the success of a discussion roughly equally
to clinicians and patients. They mentioned listening to
patients, patient engagement in selecting dialysis modalities, education and patient comprehension, and adequate
time for discussion. Conversely, nephrologists generally
ascribed failed discussions to patients, including limited
health literacy, lack of engagement, emotional responses,
caregiver interference, and language barriers (Table 3).
Paternalist Approach
Paternalists strongly identified as patient stewards or
protectors. They assumed responsibility for identifying the
treatment most likely to improve the patient’s health and
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Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology
Table 1. Participant characteristics
Characteristic
Sex
Men
Women
Years since completed
nephrology training
0–5
6–10
10+
State
Arizona
California
Florida
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
New Jersey
New Mexico
Pennsylvania
Dialysis facility medical director
Practice type
Large academic
Small academic
Community
Overall (%), n=35
28 (80)
7 (20)
7 (20)
5 (14)
23 (66)
2 (6)
2 (6)
2 (6)
3 (9)
5 (14)
13 (37)
2 (6)
4 (11)
2 (6)
18 (51)
24 (69)
4 (11)
7 (20)
symptom burden. They viewed patient autonomy and the
solicitation of patient values as less important than improving patient health and active treatment. On choosing
between dialysis and conservative management, one nephrologist remarked, “It’s usually my decision, in conjunction with them . . . You have to be the parent and say
‘Listen, I’m sorry. You have to do this’” (ID 39). Many
believed that delegating decisions to patients was abdicating their duty. Paternalists typically tailored discussions to
highlight their favored outcome. One said, “Where I feel
that [dialysis] would not be an imposition . . . I present it
in a light that they would come away thinking that they
need it” (ID 93). Dedication to patients, reliance on their
expertise, and a commitment to determining treatment
were echoed across paternalist providers.
Compared with other models, paternalists were most
likely to define successful and unsuccessful discussions by
clinical factors. One said, “A successful [discussion] tends
to be one where people consider the options and make a
decision about what kind of active treatment they want to
take, rather than opting for no treatment and a peaceful
death at home” (ID 93). Because of their commitment to
tailored care, some were concerned about institutional
interference: “I always will do everything in my power to
make sure the patient is taken care of properly not in any
cookie cutter fashion. When you’re dealing with a big
company, everything is protocol driven . . . Thank God
my practice is still on its own and we don’t work for
somebody” (ID 39).
Informative Approach
Nephrologists following this approach viewed their role
as that of an educator, enabling patient-led decision
making. They were more concerned with patient autonomy
than that patients pursue a specific treatment. One said,
“I see my job as being the information broker and to
provide that information so that if [patients] walk away
understanding at least the basic elements, even if they’re in
denial, then I guess that’s okay” (ID 94). Another said, “I’ve
not met anyone who has said they are not willing to make
or they don’t want to make a decision about their own life”
(ID 27).
To accomplish patient-led decision making, these nephrologists typically presented treatment options neutrally, often avoided specific treatment recommendations,
and accepted patients’ choices: “[W]e do give the patients
all the options. I think as a patient they have the right to
know everything. So we are not really forcing patients or
not really urging patients towards one of the options” (ID
27). They often raised conservative management as a viable
alternative to dialysis. Another said, “I do present the
option of not opting for dialysis as a legitimate choice” (ID
80). Eliciting patient values was seen as key to success:
“I hope that they understand the pros and cons and are able
to look at that in terms of their daily activities, their daily
goals, their sort of long terms plans so that they can
ultimately make the best choice for themselves” (ID 94).
Nephrologists subscribing to the informative model cited
educational factors and decision-making quality more
frequently as features of successful kidney replacement
therapy (KRT) discussions compared with other models.
They were least likely to judge success on the basis of
clinical outcomes, such as dialysis initiation. One said, “[T]
he most important thing is that the patients make an
educational . . . choice . . . the best or right for themselves,
that lets them enjoy life and live it with dignity” (ID 58).
Another said, “[T]he most important [outcome] is the patient’s autonomy. That they . . . feel that they have control of
what’s of their future and what’s going to happen to them”
(ID 86).
These nephrologists described the evolution of their
approach, having been strongly influenced by salient cases
of patient regret and poor outcomes. One said, “My colleagues and I felt very strongly about treatment options,
and we were very aggressive in pushing patients into the
direction that we thought was best. During my fellowship,
myself and several of my colleagues and fellows experienced bad outcomes, and from that, I started to realize very
early on that it shouldn’t be my decision but that my job
really is to provide information and to facilitate the patient
in deciding the best process and best treatment plan for
themselves” (ID 94).
Interpretive Approach
Nephrologists following an interpretive approach (interpreters) perceived their role as that of a guide steering
patients toward an optional treatment option: “I think
ideally, in a perfect world, patients don’t make decisions.
Patients very clearly articulate their values, goals, and
wishes, and physicians are able to achieve the goals,
values, and wishes of the patient through the vast opportunities we have within medicine” (ID 25). They emphasized trust and understanding of patient preferences:
“It’s hard for patients to articulate what . . . specific medicine
that they want. So tell me what your goals are, and I’ll tell
you what the best way of achieving them is . . . Developing a
kind of knowledge of the patient’s wishes, and appreciation
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Approaches to Decision Making with Older Patients, Ladin et al.
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Table 2. Comparison of nephrologists’ approaches to treatment decision making with older patients
Themes
Patient autonomy
Engagement and
deliberation
Neutral presentation
of options
Solicitation of patient
values and
preferences
Offering explicit
treatment
recommendation
Influence of
institutional norms
Importance of specific
clinical outcomes
Perceived role of
nephrologist
Informative
(Patient Led)
Paternalist
Interpretive
(Navigator)
Institutionalist
Views autonomy as
assenting to health
improvement; values
trust over autonomy
Patient autonomy is
most important;
patient should choose
and have control over
medical care
Patient autonomy is
integral to decision
making
Views autonomy as
assenting to
objective values
and institutional
culture
No
Yes
Yes
Often not
Related only to
treatments presented
Always for all
treatments
Always for all
treatments
Always on the basis of
clinical experience and
perceived patient
preferences
Weak
Only if patient requests
a recommendation on
the basis of expressed
patient preferences
Weak
Always; incorporating
patient-expressed
preferences and
clinical experience
Moderate
Related only to
treatments
presented
Often; influenced by
practice culture,
incentives, and
patient preferences
Strong
Focus on survival, active
therapies (e.g., dialysis
initiation); omitting
discussion of
conservative
management
Focus on process
measures, autonomy,
patient education,
decision-making
quality, patientreported outcomes
(quality of life)
Providing evidencebased education and
implementing
patient’s selected
treatment
Focus on shared
decision making,
patient education,
patient-reported
outcomes (quality of
life)
Focus on survival,
active therapies
and quality of life,
patient education
of dialysis
modalities
Clarifying and
interpreting patient
preferences,
educating patients
about options,
recommending
option,
implementing
patient selection
Promoting patient
wellbeing and
being a good
steward of
institutional
resources and
policies
Promoting their
perception of patient’s
wellbeing irrespective
of patient’s current
preferences
of their goals, such that you can really . . . orchestrate” (ID
25).
Navigators believed that social/emotional factors drive
successful KRT discussions. One said, “[W]hat feels like
a success is when people acknowledge . . . that they are
mortal . . . that they’re at peace with it and able to go on and
live happy and constructive and productive, emotionally
productive lives with that knowledge, and that I’ve helped
them do that” (ID 90). Navigators were also the only
typology to cite caregiver support as a successful outcome
of KRT discussions. One said, “The ultimate outcome is
that the family and the patient are in unison” (ID 23).
Although many navigators engaged in shared decision
making and offered treatment recommendations, some
worried that offering recommendations contradicted
shared decision making.
Many nephrologists described an evolution in approach,
developing a navigator style over time: “I started from a
very paternalistic position that we made decisions for
people. I’ve gotten to the point now that I’m much more
hands off about guiding people” (ID 90). One clarified his
response to patients disagreeing with recommendations:
“Over time, I’m sure my conversations with them have
evolved in how to deal with patients not doing what you
think is the best thing for the patient” (ID 21).
Institutionalist Approach
Practice culture and norms strongly shaped decisionmaking discussions by institutionalist nephrologists. They
attributed challenges discussing conservative management
to system-level policies and influences, such as financial
incentives, limited time allotted for appointments, and lack
of a common approach to conservative management within
the care team. One spoke of institutional constraints affecting
his behavior, including limited time: “It takes time. I think it
does require a longitudinal type of system . . . We don’t have
somebody who’s dedicated towards long-term education and
follow-up and repeated discussions about goals of care. I think
it would require physician extenders. It would require somehow health systems . . . to actually support some of these things
financially” (ID 83). About incentives, another said, “The
economic side is always important . . . the division sustains on
the revenue generated . . . from the dialysis unit” (ID 28).
Institutionalists viewed success as having sufficient
time and support from their team to engage in meaningful decision-making conversations. Their perception of
failed discussions centered on lack of consistency and
cohesion both among nephrologists in their practice and
between nephrologists and other health care providers.
One clarified, “[shared decision making] probably requires
a more . . . centralized or a more consistent way of
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Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology
Table 3. Salient quotes: Views of success, failure, and outcomes by decision-making model
Paternalist
Role is to serve as patient’s “guardian”
Patient trust and respect valued over strict patient autonomy
Prioritizes improving patient health over patient autonomy in decision making
Tailors discussion of treatment options to maximize likelihood that the nephrologists’ recommendation is selected
On when to start KRT discussions
“It’s not so much cut and dry in my opinion, there’s an art to this, and you kind of have to know your patient too. And if you know them, you know
how their body is reacting to certain things; you can kind of get a sense for when you need to potentially start having those discussions” (ID 39)
On nephrologists’ roles
“I would say paternalistic is the best word to describe it. [With] some people you have to be more confrontational to, you have to be paternalistic
in a different way, you have to be somewhat browbeating, you have to be, treat them like your 10 yr old son or you know where ‘you need to do
this,’ you know you have to lecture them. And that doesn’t always work. In fact, more often than not, I would say it doesn’t work, that
approach, but you have to do it. You have to say, ‘you don’t realize it, but a year from now you’re going to be, you know, horizontal, you’re
not going to be vertical if you keep this up’” (ID 48)
On patient autonomy
“People really rely on you to help make your decisions. There’s a whole group of people that will follow along. ‘You tell me Doctor what to do and
I’ll do it,’ and those are a win, but it puts you in an uncomfortable spot, because they are relying on you to make their decision. So while in
a way those are the easiest . . . it’s a heavy burden, because they don’t really want to make their own decisions” (ID 48)
Views of success
“People that follow our instructions . . . I think an early placement of a fistula whether or not you go onto dialysis is really important” (ID 48)
“Do they feel better? Did they improve clinically? Did their symptoms improve? That’s the most important thing—did they get better” (ID 39)
Views of failure
“I guess the unsuccessful one might be the patient who doesn’t want to talk about it at all. Where it’s so frightening, or imposing, that they
can’t even deal with it and refuse to discuss . . . I haven’t had a lot of people who think it over and say, ‘I don’t want to do any of this, you know,
give me the palliative treatment and let me go’” (ID 93)
Informative
Role is to serve as patient’s “information broker”
Prioritizes patient autonomy in decision making and accepts patient’s treatment choice
May tailor discussion on the basis of patient’s values, beliefs, and wishes
On when to start KRT discussions
“If they’re approaching . . . CKD stage 4, I often want to ask sort of if they had to make a decision today . . . which way are they leaning, and
if patients say that, ‘I’ve lived a long life and wouldn’t want anything done,’ then I again I’ll refer them to the kidney class and I’ll say,
‘I respect your decision; if that’s your decision, I will respect that and support that, but I do want you to make sure that you understand what’s
involved.’ . . . I also mention that this is not a hard and fast decision, so if they change their mind they’re welcome to as well” (ID 14)
On nephrologists’ role
“I hope they understand what the kidneys do and what some of the basic problems are if their kidneys are failing, and therefore, I hope they then
in turn understand what dialysis will and won’t do for them. I hope they understand that we’re trying to work with them on a timeline that
will not feel rushed and will allow them to make decisions for themselves” (ID 42)
“I hope I can help them clarify their goals. So . . . what do they want for themselves, and then, once they make that decision, I hope I can facilitate
that transition, to whatever that is, and help them through that process” (ID 72)
On patient autonomy
“[The] ultimate choice of kidney replacement therapy (if it progresses to that point) is something that the patient will look back and appreciate
that they made that decision” (ID 14)
Views of success
“I think that patients have a sense of what works best for them, and I think that sometimes patients know their diagnoses even before we’ve made
the diagnosis. So listening to the patient really has been very helpful, and I think the outcomes are better or at least the patient experience is
better” (ID 94)
“If somebody leaves the room feeling sort of fairly supported and that they can ask additional questions . . . moving down a path based on sort
of a shared decision” (ID 42)
“I think the successful discussion is when you really have a conversation with both parties that are equally engaged in it, and . . . when the patient
really understands what’s going on with them and what will be best for them” (ID 58)
Views of failure
“I think there’s probably a whole bunch of unsuccessful discussions we’re not aware of, because we don’t really understand what people took
away from what we’ve said” (ID 3)
“I guess a failure of a decision would be a patient that we [nephrologists] are making [KRT] decisions, even though I’ve had a long relationship
with them, we’re making those decisions in the hospital setting, inpatient setting, rather than the outpatient setting . . . [T]he unsuccessful
ones are the ones that patients either come to an early closure of decision or have not thought of any decisions . . . and by early closure, I mean
like they say, ‘I don’t want anything done’ is a traditional thing that I’ll hear” (ID 14)
“[C]ertain times, you know people get angry at what they’re hearing and sort of not involved in the decision making” (ID 86)
Interpretive
Role is to guide a patient to an optimal treatment selection on the basis of a patient’s values and goals
Develops a strong rapport with a patient to facilitate guided decision making
Tailors discussion of treatment options on the basis of a patient’s values, beliefs, and wishes
On when to have KRT discussions
“I begin with discussions in early CKD [stage] 4 . . . when GFRs are 30, but usually when it’s in the 20s . . . [I] approach it slowly, have them
think it over for a little bit, come back, talk with family members, and come back again. How have I modified [my approach from] earlier on:
I had been fairly aggressive with saying, ‘OK, now all we need to do is set you up with the vascular surgeon, I’d like you to talk about this, I’d
like you to go visit the centers.’ I think [patients] probably pushed back quickly . . . and I’ve backed off a little bit over the years” (ID 81)
On nephrologists’ role
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Approaches to Decision Making with Older Patients, Ladin et al.
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Table 3. (Continued)
“I will certainly tailor the information that I’m providing. I’m hoping tailoring them to an appropriate level of education, literacy, etc. . . .
Sometimes, I find that patients are looking for me to have a larger role in the decision-making process in the sense of giving perhaps more
concrete guidance. If that’s the case, then I will try to do so in a, still making clear to them that it’s their decision, but perhaps . . . to frame the
decision a little more discretely or concretely” (ID 7)
On patient autonomy
“I want the patient to decide what is best for them. It’s not like one size fits all. It’s their life, sometimes they don’t want to do dialysis, which is
perfectly fine. I mean, the patient’s choice comes first” (ID 5)
“It’s important to have a sense of that they’ve been informed to the extent that they can be about what their choices are and that they are making
choices that are consistent with kind of where they’re going in life” (ID 26)
Views of success
“I’m happy if they’ve come out together . . . we’ve come out with an informed decision of what works best for the patient and their sort of lifestyle
and what they want” (ID 19)
“The most important outcome is that they receive the care that they have selected, so particularly if they have selected not to receive dialysis and
to have conservative care, that they do not end up on dialysis [in an emergency admission]” (ID 7)
“I that that the best outcomes is where they do complete that [advance directive] and have discussed it with their family, and then even better is
if the family and the patient feel some relief on having gone through the process” (ID 63)
Views of failure
“A suspicious patient who, who doesn’t believe that they truly need dialysis, an unengaged patient, a patient who holds false belief systems,
somebody believes that prayer will correct their renal failure, they don’t need to engage with the discussion. A situation where you haven’t
developed trust” (ID 68)
“If they’re not accepting, that makes it harder. There’s a handful of patients I have that have never told their family members as to what’s
happening, so family members don’t even know that they’ve been seeing a nephrologist, and they’ve been coming every 3 or 4 mo, and they’re at
the point that they need to make decisions” (ID 91)
Institutionalist
Role is to treat patients within the norms and culture of a practice group or institution
Cites time as a key challenge to discussions with patients with CKD
Tailors discussion of treatment options to patients
On nephrologists’ role
“You’re aware in the sense a major part of the revenue comes . . . from the dialysis unit. So obviously I want people to go on dialysis, not but
I don’t want the wrong person to go on dialysis. So that’s something which . . . although I say that I don’t want the wrong person to go on
dialysis, but still I feel that I’m doing it” (ID 28)
“We talk about quality of life to the patients; we try to gauge what is important for them. But I do believe we do a poor job because of the limits of time
that we have with the patients. There are the pressures of seeing many patients, and we don’t have the luxury of setting aside an hour for each
follow-up visit, at least in our health system . . . Trying to align the modality choice, if it’s dialysis or not dialysis, to what they want, what their
expectations are, what, what their goals are, but again, I think that we don’t fully explore that because of the limitations of time” (ID 83)
On patient autonomy
“We try to discuss with them why this is important and uh, that their participation is key, that uh you know, that it really has, that what our goal
is try to align whatever we do with what they want or what they desire out of their lives. I think we do, I do think we selectively push
some modalities more than others or some depending on the individual” (ID 83)
Views of success
“The dialysis staff . . . play a major role in the decision making . . . these patients and family members, they interact with those staff . . . more than
their interaction with me . . . Definitely [patient] survival . . . the next thing will be the quality of life” (ID 28)
Views of failure
“I think it’s the patient is kind of beyond their denial. I feel so many of them are stuck in that or there is this wishful thinking that their kidneys will
get better. There is this notion that if they don’t feel poorly, then there can’t be anything that bad, even if the blood tests show it . . . I would
say that’s the biggest challenge initially, and it’s smoothest when the patients are accepting that they have advanced kidney failure and uh,
will most likely at some point in time need dialysis” (ID 83)
These quotes show differences in nephrologists’ approaches to discussions with older patients at key points along the clinical and
decision-making cascade, starting with broaching the subject of KRT followed by perceptions of nephrologists’ role and patient
autonomy and finally, their perceptions of successful versus failed encounters. These clinical decision points reflect key themes presented
in Table 2, including patient autonomy, perceived role of the nephrologist, engagement and deliberation, importance of specific clinical
outcomes, and institutional norms (captured in views of success, views of failure, and when to start KRT discussions). KRT, kidney
replacement therapy.
addressing that issue. Because right now, a lot of it is probably
provider dependent or nephrologist dependent, how that
question is asked again and how much of the exploration of
patient expectations and priorities are discussed” (ID 83).
Uncertain about how conservative management recommendations would be received by both patients and their institution, some noted a desire for stronger institutional norms
related to conservative management discussions.
Discussion
Among nephrologists, four distinct approaches to KRT
decision making emerged, offering new explanations for
variation in decision making and access to conservative
management for older patients with CKD. Differences
between paternalist, informative, interpretive, and institutionalist approaches were largely on the basis of divergent
perceptions of physician role, patient autonomy, and
successful versus failed discussions. Understanding how
these differences shape nephrologists’ discussions and
delineating the benefits and shortcomings of each approach
can facilitate the development of improved guidance to
support nephrologists caring for older patients.
Choosing whether to undergo dialysis triggers a cascade
of choices determining how people with kidney failure will
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Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology
live their last stage of life. In 2001, the Renal Physicians’
Association and the American Society of Nephrology first
issued clinical guidelines promoting shared decision making in dialysis initiation and withdrawal decisions (31).
However, for reasons incompletely understood, shared
decision making, although widely supported, has not been
widely implemented (32,33). This typological analysis
clarifies the patterning of documented barriers and facilitators to shared decision making (14,24,34), revealing
disparate approaches to decision making and care for
older patients with CKD.
Most nephrologists supported shared decision making
but differed in their interpretation and approach to patient
engagement. Whereas paternalists grappled with presenting treatment options neutrally and strayed from shared
decision-making principles by constraining patients’
choices, nephrologists following an informative approach
struggled to provide explicit recommendations, also deviating from shared decision-making principles. Institutionalists and interpreters wanted more guidance about
shared decision making. In some circumstances, nephrologists deviated from their typical approach, suggesting that
approaches may be modifiable and that shared decision
making could be improved, potentially with clearer guidance about patient engagement and discussion of treatment
harms and benefits.
To ensure consideration of dialysis, many “paternalist”
nephrologists avoided discussing conservative management, concerned that patients would react emotionally and
disengage or reject dialysis outright. However, ample
evidence shows that patients want knowledge about all
options, prognostic information, and recommendations for
care, even if they decide not to follow them (3,35,36). This
includes learning about palliative options (22). Paternalist
approaches favoring active, life-prolonging interventions
are still embraced in emergency settings, including emergency dialysis, where time is scarce and patients’ preferences cannot be ascertained. However, in the context
of chronic or late life care, this approach may require
modification, particularly because physicians have the
opportunity to explore patients’ preferences and cannot
assume that interventions will not result in harm or regret.
Among 584 older patients on dialysis, 61% regretted
starting dialysis, and over one half reported choosing
dialysis over conservative management due to their doctor’s wish (2). Other studies have found that patients want
more balanced information about treatment options, including conservative management, even when options
seem bleak (3,19,37,38). As such, nephrologists subscribing
to the paternalist model may consider eliciting patient
preferences and ensuring that all options are presented.
Institutionalists valued consistency and cohesion. They
often recommended active treatment and struggled to
discuss conservative management because of inconsistent
institutional support for palliative care. However, institutionalists encouraged patient engagement in dialysis
modality selection in accordance with institutional
commitment to increasing utilization of peritoneal dialysis.
This model underscores the significant opportunity and
importance of health system improvement. Greater coordination and communication about patients’ goals of care
and preferences for conservative management among
nephrologists within a practice and between nephrologists
and other team members (e.g., palliative care, primary care,
etc.) could bolster efforts of institutionalists to engage in
shared decision making and conservative management
discussions (39). Institutionalists strongly desired clearer
guidelines, stronger support, and recognition (financial and
institutional) to increase shared decision making and
conservative management discussions. Although Medicare
issued codes in January 2016 to reimburse nephrologists for
advance care planning, compensation is low, and system
improvements are needed, including consistent documentation in electronic health records.
Informative approaches also have limitations, empowering patients but unnecessarily disempowering nephrologists. Nephrologists in this model avoided offering
recommendations, not wanting to excessively influence
patients. By offering neutral information without recommendations, nephrologists assume the role of a technical
expert but not a guide (21). This approach may be effective
for patients who have high health literacy or those more
familiar with kidney failure treatments. However, many
patients grappling with decisions regarding dialysis initiation want an explicit recommendation (3,34). Cognitive
decline, complex family dynamics, and difficulty understanding long-term implications for quality of life underscore the importance of guidance from nephrologists to
align patient preferences with treatment.
The interpreter model offers a balance between paternalist and patient-led approaches to decision making (3).
By understanding patients’ values and drawing on experience, interpreters help patients explore options, consider
potential harms and benefits, and offer advice on the basis
of trust cultivated through long-standing relationships.
Interpreters guide patients by focusing on quality of life,
engaging patients in questions about goals for the last stage
of life, activities most meaningful to them, and perspectives
on end-of-life care. Although the interpreter approach is
most consistent with shared decision making, it may not
work in every setting, including dialysis initiation in
emergency settings. The interpreter approach requires
significant time, training, and comfort discussing difficult
topics; established doctor-patient relationships; and institutional support.
Strengths of our study include purposively sampling
across multiple states. Limitations include oversampling
academic medical centers; sex imbalance, which may affect
communication style; and self-reported accounts, which
may not perfectly reflect practice. Although not originally
developed from empirical evidence, this study and others
suggest that the typology of Emanuel and Emanuel (21)
generally fits with medical practice. Our findings likely are
transferable to nephrologists treating older patients with
CKD (3) and provide a framework for improving conservative management discussions.
In conclusion, distinct decision-making models among
nephrologists result in variation in patient experiences,
decision making, and conservative management discussions. Many nephrologists desire better communication
strategies to engage patients in difficult conversations and
shared decision making (14,32,40). Achieving shared decision making may require nephrologists to adopt elements
of informative and interpretive approaches and reserve
Clin J Am Soc Nephrol 13: 1188–1196, August, 2018
paternalist approaches to emergency decision making,
where patient preferences cannot be ascertained. Nephrologists should reflect on their approach to decision making
with older patients and understand the strengths and
weaknesses of each model in an effort to better achieve
shared decision making.
Acknowledgments
We are extremely grateful for the generous contributions of the
clinicians in participating in the study.
K.L. gratefully acknowledges financial support from National
Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, National Institutes of
Health award KL2TR001063 and support from the Greenwall
Foundation Faculty Scholars Program.
The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not
necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of
Health.
Disclosures
K.B.M. and D.E.W. receive indirect salary support paid through
Tufts Medical Center from Dialysis Clinic, Inc. (DCI) and are DCI
medical directors. The authors have no conflicts of interests and no
additional financial disclosures to report.
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Received: February 7, 2018 Accepted: May 15, 2018
Published online ahead of print. Publication date available at www.
cjasn.org.
See related Patient Voice, “Person-Centered Approach to Deciding
on Long-Term Dialysis,” on pages 1133–1134.