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Related Concept Videos

Chronic Kidney Disease III: Interprofessional Care01:28

Chronic Kidney Disease III: Interprofessional Care

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) requires collaborative and comprehensive management. CKD progresses through stages and can lead to end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) if untreated. Interprofessional collaboration and patient education are crucial, enabling patients to manage their health and improve their quality of life.Diagnostic approach for chronic kidney diseaseThe diagnosis of CKD primarily focuses on the glomerular filtration rate (GFR), which assesses kidney function by measuring how well...
Chronic Kidney Disease IV: Nursing Management01:18

Chronic Kidney Disease IV: Nursing Management

Nursing management is essential for preventing complications, maintaining stability, and improving patients' quality of life in chronic kidney disease (CKD). By using a structured approach, nurses help slow CKD progression and support effective patient care​.1. Comprehensive patient assessmentEffective management begins with nurses reviewing the patient’s medical history, and identifying key risk factors like diabetes, hypertension, and nephrotoxic drug use. Nurses assess signs of fluid...
Acute Kidney Injury IV: Diagnostic Studies and Prevention01:30

Acute Kidney Injury IV: Diagnostic Studies and Prevention

Accurate diagnosis and effective prevention are critical in managing Acute Kidney Injury (AKI), which is linked to high mortality rates ranging from 10% to 80%. Timely recognition of at-risk patients and careful monitoring can significantly reduce the likelihood of kidney damage.Diagnostic Assessments:The diagnostic process starts with a comprehensive medical history to identify prerenal, intrarenal, and postrenal causes.Prerenal causes, such as dehydration, hypotension, or blood loss, should...
Drug Dosing in Renal Diseases: Estimation of Glomerular Filtration Rate Based on Serum Creatinine Concentration01:28

Drug Dosing in Renal Diseases: Estimation of Glomerular Filtration Rate Based on Serum Creatinine Concentration

Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) can be estimated from serum creatinine using the modification of diet in renal disease (MDRD) formula or the chronic kidney disease–epidemiology collaboration (CKD–EPI) equation. Both methods are widely used in clinical practice to assess kidney function and guide treatment decisions.The MDRD equation does not require weight or height measurements and is normalized to the body surface area of 1.73 m², considered the average adult surface area. This equation is...
Acute Kidney Injury V: Interprofessional Care01:20

Acute Kidney Injury V: Interprofessional Care

Acute Kidney Injury (AKI) requires a collaborative healthcare approach to restore renal function and prevent complications. Essential management strategies involve monitoring fluid and electrolyte balance, adjusting medications, initiating dialysis when necessary, and providing nutritional support.Fluid and Electrolyte ManagementFluid Monitoring: Regularly monitoring body weight, central venous pressure, and urine output helps detect fluid imbalances early. Patient intake and output are...
Chronic Kidney Disease I: Introduction01:25

Chronic Kidney Disease I: Introduction

Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) arises when the kidneys progressively lose their ability to function, ultimately leading to end-stage renal disease. At this advanced stage, the kidneys can no longer filter waste or maintain essential body functions, requiring renal replacement therapy (RRT) through dialysis or a kidney transplant for survival.Early-stage chronic kidney disease and detection challengesIn CKD's early stages, symptoms often remain absent because healthy nephrons compensate for...

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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jul 1, 2026

Involving Individuals with Developmental Language Disorder and Their Parents/Carers in Research Priority Setting
06:16

Involving Individuals with Developmental Language Disorder and Their Parents/Carers in Research Priority Setting

Published on: June 6, 2020

Priorities for Evidence-Based CKD Guidance Using Delphi Methods.

Brydee Cashmore1,2, Martin Howell1,2,3, Chandana Guha1,2

  • 1Faculty of Medicine and Health, Sydney School of Public Health, The University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.

Kidney International Reports
|June 30, 2026
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Shared priorities in chronic kidney disease (CKD) care were identified between patients and clinicians. This research aligns evidence-based treatments with patient needs for better CKD management.

Keywords:
Delphiclinical practice guidelineconsumer involvementkidney diseasepatient-centered carepriority setting

Related Experiment Videos

Last Updated: Jul 1, 2026

Involving Individuals with Developmental Language Disorder and Their Parents/Carers in Research Priority Setting
06:16

Involving Individuals with Developmental Language Disorder and Their Parents/Carers in Research Priority Setting

Published on: June 6, 2020

Area of Science:

  • Nephrology
  • Public Health
  • Health Services Research

Background:

  • Systematic reviews and clinical guidelines often lack transparent prioritization and patient input.
  • Aligning evidence-based care with patient and clinician needs is crucial for effective chronic kidney disease (CKD) management.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To identify shared priorities between individuals with lived experience of CKD and healthcare professionals.
  • To inform the development of patient-centered systematic reviews and clinical practice guidelines.

Main Methods:

  • A 3-round modified-Delphi survey was conducted across four modules: nondialysis CKD, peritoneal dialysis (PD), hemodialysis (HD), and transplantation.
  • Participants rated and ranked broad topics and refined subtopics using Likert scales and Best-Worst Scaling (BWS).
  • Topic progression was determined by Likert thresholds, agreement scores, and BWS data, with descriptive statistics used for summarization.

Main Results:

  • Participation increased from 102 in round 1 (27% consumers) to 613 in round 3 (71% consumers).
  • Key prioritized topics included CKD evaluation/management, infection control (PD), cardiovascular disease management (HD), and transplant rejection.
  • Prioritized subtopics focused on slowing CKD progression, maintaining kidney function (PD), volume control (HD), and managing medication side effects (transplantation).
  • Consumers prioritized daily-life impacts (symptoms, psychosocial support, prevention, education), while clinicians focused on care delivery (protocols, monitoring).

Conclusions:

  • This multistakeholder prioritization identified actionable subtopics in kidney care.
  • Findings center on slowing CKD progression and improving symptoms during kidney replacement therapy.
  • Results support targeted systematic reviews and guideline updates to enhance shared decision-making in CKD care.