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What patients with kidney stones believe about their condition. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Patients' beliefs about their kidney stone (KS) condition play a crucial role in their adjustment and adherence to self-management, with this study being the first to quantitatively analyze these beliefs.
  • A survey of 112 KS patients revealed that a significant portion (31.2%) didn't know the cause of their condition, while those who did attributed it mainly to dietary choices, fluid intake, and medical risk factors.
  • Findings also indicated that while patients felt fairly knowledgeable about KS, they expressed low personal control over their condition and high confidence in treatment effectiveness, emphasizing the need to enhance their sense of control in managing KS.

Article Abstract

Patients' beliefs about their illness are of central importance in understanding how a person adjusts to their condition and adheres to self-management recommendations. No previous studies have set out to quantitatively examine Illness beliefs in patients with kidney stones (KS). 112 patients with radiological confirmation of KS (59% male, mean (x̄) age = 50.1 years [sd14.15 years], 50.5% previous surgical treatment) attending for clinical consultation completed the Brief-Illness Perception Questionnaire alongside a range of demographic and illness related variables. Template analysis was undertaken on the free text responses of patients' beliefs about what had caused their KS. Almost a third (31.2%) of patients did not know what had caused their KS. Of those who cited a cause, dietary factors, fluid intake, medical risk factors (e.g. Inflammatory bowel disease), genetics, and psychological factors were ranked as the most important. Patients generally believed they had a reasonable understanding of KS (x̄=6.32 [sd3.21]), but reported poor levels of personal control over their KS (x̄=2.90 [sd2.93]) and high confidence in the effectiveness of treatments (x̄=8.64 [sd1.90]). Patients with a recurrence believed KS had a significantly greater impact on their life (z=-2.56, p = 0.01) and had greater emotional consequences (z=-2.77, p < 0.01). Perceptions of poor personal control over KS and a strong belief in medical/surgical treatment was evident regardless of first or recurrent stone, gender, age, previous surgical management of KS or time since diagnosis. Results highlight the need to actively increase patients' perceptions of personal control in the management and prevention of KS.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00240-024-01633-9DOI Listing

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