2016
DOI: 10.1111/jan.12997
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Multidimensional symptom clusters: an exploratory factor analysis in advanced chronic kidney disease

Abstract: Adopting a symptom cluster approach has the potential to significantly advance symptom assessment and nursing care for people in advanced stages of chronic kidney disease. Routine clinical assessment and management strategies targeted at the cluster level should have synergistic effects in reducing symptoms. Fatigue is a pervasive symptom in advanced chronic kidney disease that is interconnected with global symptom burden, suggesting better management of symptom clusters may also reduce fatigue.

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Cited by 44 publications
(96 citation statements)
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“…sleep disturbance, poor appetite and depression), which may collectively cause impairments in the physical and social functioning of individuals with CKD (Almutary et al . ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…sleep disturbance, poor appetite and depression), which may collectively cause impairments in the physical and social functioning of individuals with CKD (Almutary et al . ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…These findings substantiate the work of Almutary et al . (), where, rather than existing in isolation, symptoms were found to occur in clusters. The multiplicity of symptoms reported by participants emphasises the systemic nature of renal disease, a finding consistent with Thomas et al .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other individual symptoms included pain (e.g., Matthie & McMillan, 2014), constipation (McMillan, Tofthagen, Small, Karver, & Craig, 2013) and chronic cough (French, Crawford, Bova, & Irwin, 2017). Just over half of the investigators included more than one symptom, ranging from two or three symptoms to more than 30 symptoms (e.g., Almutary, Douglas, & Bonner, 2016). However, there was often little attention given to all four symptom dimensions included in the TOUS: timing, distress, intensity and quality.…”
Section: Symptomsmentioning
confidence: 99%