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Research Articles

Assessing Chronic Kidney Disease Knowledge, Beliefs, and Risk among Detroit Residents

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Pages 99-108 | Received 24 Apr 2022, Accepted 24 Oct 2022, Published online: 27 Jan 2023
 

ABSTRACT

Background

In 2020, Detroit residents’ crude kidney disease mortality rate was 1.48 times the state’s rate.

Purpose

Evaluated Detroit residents’ chronic kidney disease (CKD) knowledge, risk, belief, and preventative practices. Additionally, it examined the association between residents’ CKD knowledge, their sociodemographics, CKD risk and belief.

Methods

378 Detroit residents, ages 20 years or older, were recruited from May 2019-August 2021 to complete the Qualtrics survey on their CKD knowledge, beliefs, and risk. Descriptive statistics and multiple linear regression were conducted to meet the study’s purpose.

Results

Most participants were unaware of dry and itchy skin as a CKD symptom (60%). African Americans (β = −1.5; p = .002) and those with a high school education or less (β = −1.46; p = .038) had lower knowledge scores than White residents and those with higher education. Participants’ knowledge score increased by 0.64 as CKD risk score increased by 1 (β = 0.64; p = .019).

Discussion

CKD knowledge is low among Detroit residents and associated with race, education, and risk level.

Translation to Health Education Practice: African American Detroit residents would benefit from targeted marketing and communication plans that increase their knowledge of CKD prevention. It also depicts key components (e.g., risks factors) that should be communicated in the messages.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

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