Elsevier

Kidney International

Volume 80, Issue 12, 2 December 2011, Pages 1344-1351
Kidney International

Original Article
Associations among perceived and objective disease knowledge and satisfaction with physician communication in patients with chronic kidney disease

https://doi.org/10.1038/ki.2011.240Get rights and content
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It is likely that patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) have a limited understanding of their illness. Here we studied the relationships between objective and perceived knowledge in CKD using the Kidney Disease Knowledge Survey and the Perceived Kidney Disease Knowledge Survey. We quantified perceived and objective knowledge in 399 patients at all stages of non-dialysis-dependent CKD. Demographically, the patient median age was 58 years, 47% were women, 77% had stages 3–5 CKD, and 83% were Caucasians. The overall median score of the perceived knowledge survey was 2.56 (range: 1–4), and this new measure exhibited excellent reliability and construct validity. In unadjusted analysis, perceived knowledge was associated with patient characteristics defined a priori, including objective knowledge and patient satisfaction with physician communication. In adjusted analysis, older age, male gender, and limited health literacy were associated with lower perceived knowledge. Additional analysis revealed that perceived knowledge was associated with significantly higher odds (2.13), and objective knowledge with lower odds (0.91), of patient satisfaction with physician communication. Thus, our results present a mechanism to evaluate distinct forms of patient kidney knowledge and identify specific opportunities for education tailored to patients with CKD.

KEYWORDS

health literacy
kidney disease
objective knowledge
patient knowledge
perceived knowledge

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All the authors declared no competing interests.

This research has been presented, in part, at 2010 and 2011 NKF spring clinical meetings.