• J Palliat Med · Nov 2023

    Adding Pals to KidneyPal: Creating a Virtual Patient and Family Advisory Council for Kidney Palliative Care.

    • Kimberly Mendoza, Kelsey Killeen, Joshua R Lakin, Richard E Leiter, Kate R Sciacca, and Samantha L Gelfand.
    • Division of Palliative Medicine, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
    • J Palliat Med. 2023 Nov 1; 26 (11): 145014521450-1452.

    AbstractPatient and family advisory councils (PFACs) represent one method of engaging patients and families in clinical program development and research, but existing practices too often exclude marginalized and minority voices. As a kidney palliative care team (KidneyPal) at a large academic medical center, we sought to create a PFAC that explicitly considered equity and inclusion in its approach to advisor recruitment. We developed two major innovations to reduce selection bias in our KidneyPal PFAC: adaptation to an entirely virtual process and alteration of the advisor recruitment and enrollment process. We eliminated several potential barriers to participation for our patients and their family members, a population with higher rates of advanced age, nonwhite ethnicity, and limited English proficiency than the local general population. We removed application requirements including lengthy online training modules, detailed employment history, a personal essay, and a criminal background check. The KidneyPal PFAC may act as a model for improving equity and inclusion in virtual patient advisory councils.

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