AI Article Synopsis

  • Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is more prevalent in women at stages 3-5 without albuminuria, but most patients receiving kidney replacement therapy are men, indicating a gender disparity influenced by biological and social factors.
  • A study used questionnaires to explore CKD patients' and caregivers' views on gender roles and health care, gathering responses from 783 patients and 98 caregivers at clinics in Austria.
  • Results showed both male and female patients generally believe women manage their health better and that gender does not affect treatment equality in CKD care, with a strong consensus among caregivers as well.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Chronic kidney disease (CKD) in stages 3-5 without albuminuria occurs more often in women than in men; however, most patients initiating and receiving kidney replacement therapy are men. Sex-determined biological factors and gender-related aspects both likely account for this discrepancy. Patient opinions on gender-related discrepancies in kidney care have not been investigated.

Methods: Building upon the findings of semi-structured interviews previously conducted with CKD patients and their caregivers, two questionnaires were developed to investigate patient behavior and opinions relating to gender and CKD. These questionnaires containing 39 items were distributed to eight outpatient clinics in Austria. Responses were descriptively analyzed and compared between genders, as well as between age-groups and CKD stages.

Results: Questionnaires from 783 patients and 98 caregivers were included in the analysis and covered health awareness and self-management of disease, the impact of gender roles and gender equality, and patient autonomy and trust in the health-care system. A total of 56.1% of men patients and 63.1% of women patients found that women were better at looking after their health compared to men (41.1%/34.3% no difference, 2.8%/2.6% men better). A total of 95.4% of men patients, 95.0% of women patients, 100% of men caregivers, and 95.5% of women caregivers stated that all patients with kidney disease were treated completely equally, irrespective of gender.

Conclusion: Neither the patients nor the caregivers stated gender-determined treatment decisions in CKD care. Both men and women however agreed that women are better at maintaining their own health and excel in disease self-management.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11446334PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000540850DOI Listing

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