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Article Abstract

Background: Needling is a key step in haemodialysis. Research suggests that needling experience is sub-optimal; however, no validated measure exists to inform improvements. We addressed this by developing the Needling Patient Reported Experience Measure (NPREM).

Methods: We used mixed methods and co-production. All participants were adults with working fistulas/grafts from eight UK kidney centres. Phase 1 involved developing concepts and items: in interviews ( = 41), we explored patients' needling experience and identified key aspects of needling using thematic analysis. This informed the 98-item NPREM(v0.1). Phase 2 was piloting the measure: cognitive interviews ( = 16) assessed face validity. Items were amended or removed, yielding a 48-item NPREM(v0.2). A pilot survey ( = 183) examined initial psychometric properties. NPREM(v0.2) showed good internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha = 0.95). Review of analyses resulted in a 35-item NPREM(v0.3). Phase 3 involved evaluating the measure's dimensionality, validity and reliability: patients ( = 468) completed the NPREM(v0.3), Vascular Access Quality of Life (VASQoL), EuroQol 5-Dimension-5-Level (EQ-5D-5L) and Patient Activation Measure (PAM), with a sub-set completing a follow-up NPREM ( = 99). Items were evaluated with 28 items retained in the NPREM(v1.0). Confirmatory factor analysis confirmed a unidimensional model fit (comparative fit index = 0.899). Validity of the NPREM(v1.0) was good [convergent: VASQoL (= 0.60) and overall experience (= 0.79); divergent: EQ-5D (= -0.31), EQ-5D visul analogue scale (= 0.24) and PAM (= 0.17)]. Test-retest scores were strongly correlated (= 0.88), demonstrating high reliability. Known-groups validity was demonstrated between centre scores [range 5.21 (standard deviation 1.20) to 5.94 (0.75)].

Conclusion: The NPREM measures patient experience of needling for haemodialysis. It offers kidney services a means of assessing needling experience, informing patient-focused clinical and service improvements.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11928787PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ckj/sfaf029DOI Listing

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