Abstract
Eliminating racial inequities in access to kidney transplantation requires multilevel interventions that target both patients and health systems. The aim of this study was to determine whether adding culturally sensitive, web-based patient education to a transplant center-level intervention was associated with increased knowledge, motivation to pursue living donor kidney transplant, and confidence in the behavioral skills to discuss living donation among Black/African American patients with end-stage kidney disease. A total of 411 transplant candidates were randomized to intervention (N = 222) or control groups (N = 189) and completed measures at baseline and immediate follow-up during the transplant evaluation visit. Results indicated no significant change in knowledge across time or study condition. At immediate follow-up, participants of both study conditions exhibited a significantly higher motivation to pursue living donation (t = 3.066, P < .01) versus at baseline. Both study conditions demonstrated increased confidence in the behavioral skills to discuss living donation over time (t = 3.580, P < .001). Process evaluation findings demonstrated limited engagement with the online video content across both conditions. Results suggest that the intervention did not perform better than control but raised important considerations for the delivery of transplant education targeting Black/African American patients in a busy clinical setting.
Published Version
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