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NOT YET RECRUITING
NCT07017556
NA

Views on Information Resources for Kidney Transplantation Patients

Sponsor: University of Auckland, New Zealand

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

The goal of this pilot study is to find out whether educational videos can help patients better understand, and remember, important information regarding the benefits and risks of having a kidney transplant. The study aims to answer several questions, including: 1. Is the video-based educational intervention acceptable and feasible for kidney transplant patients? 2. Does the intervention improve patient knowledge and satisfaction immediately after viewing? 3. Does the intervention improve patient knowledge retention a week later? 4. What are patients views on the video format as an educational tool? At the moment, patients learn about kidney transplantation through written documents, and discussions and conversations with their clinicians / doctors. However, the concern here is that not everyone has the same level of understanding when it comes to language literacy, medical jargon and information. This can result in gaps in knowledge, misunderstandings, and / or misinterpretations, including the need for lifelong medication and possible post-transplant complications. Patients understanding of the benefits and risks of transplantation is extremely important, as there are aspects which patients may not be aware of, including the need for (and importance of) lifelong medication, and also potential disease complications which may follow transplantation. For example, following a kidney transplant, it is not uncommon for patients to develop diabetes. Participants in the study will: Watch two short videos (roughly five minutes each) that explain the benefits and risks of kidney transplantation. Answer some questions before video viewing, immediately after video viewing, and one week after video viewing. Complete a short interview to give deeper feedback on the videos. This study will explore whether using video helps patients to feel more informed and also satisfied with the clinical information they receive, and whether they can better retain this information. The investigators aim to support more informed patients, making transplant education clearer, more accessible, and generally easier to understand.

Official title: An Exploratory Mixed-Methods Pilot Study on the Use of Educational Videos to Improve Knowledge and Satisfaction in Kidney Transplantation Patients

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

60

Start Date

2025-06

Completion Date

2026-02

Last Updated

2025-06-15

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

Views on Information Resources for Kidney Transplantation Patients

A pilot study to improve kidney transplant patient education. The study explores whether videos help patients to better understand and remember important information regarding the benefits and risks of receiving a kidney transplant. Currently, patients receive transplant information through written materials, and clinician discussions. However, not everyone has the same level of language literacy and medical understanding, which can lead to critical knowledge gaps, misunderstandings, and misinterpretations. Patients may also not know about lifelong medication needs, and complications which may follow transplantation, such as diabetes, making patient education and understanding essential. This study explores whether video materials helps patients feel more informed and satisfied with the clinical information they receive, and whether they can better retain this information. The investigators aim to support more informed patients, making transplant education clearer, and accessible.

Locations (1)

Auckland City Hospital

Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand