Normalized barriers and unaddressed concerns: A qualitative study of the lived experiences of adults living in rural areas with advanced chronic kidney disease

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Rationale & Objective

People who live in rural areas with advanced chronic kidney disease (CKD) face well-documented structural barriers to receiving care, yet little is known about how they experience their illness or perceive interactions with their healthcare teams. We aimed to characterize the lived experiences and care perceptions of adults living in rural areas with advanced, pre-dialysis CKD.

Study Design

We conducted semi-structured qualitative interviews with patients and care partners.

Setting & Participants

We recruited patients with advanced CKD (stages 4–5, not on dialysis) and their care partners from a single hospital-based nephrology clinic in northern New England serving a predominantly rural population.

Analytical Approach

We analyzed interview transcripts using participatory Practical Thematic Analysis (PTA), an inductive, stakeholder-engaged approach to qualitative analysis.

Results

We interviewed 12 patients and 4 care partners. Four themes were identified: (1) logistical challenges of rural CKD care were pervasive but frequently normalized as an expected feature of rural life; (2) disease progression and future treatments were sources of uncertainty and concern, with expectations about dialysis often shaped by peer accounts rather than clinical discussion; (3) clinical conversations centered on laboratory results and medications, leaving emotional concerns and psychologic challenges unaddressed; and (4) physical symptoms and lifestyle changes were common but frequently attributed to comorbid conditions rather than to CKD.

Limitations

Recruitment from a single clinic with a small, racially homogeneous sample limits transferability. While in-person recruitment may have excluded patients with greater transportation barriers, those who attended represent a population navigating substantial access challenges to receive care.

Conclusions

Adults living in rural areas with advanced CKD experience logistical, emotional, and informational challenges broadly consistent with those reported in non-rural CKD populations. Patients normalized geographic barriers and did not consistently identify rurality as a source of disadvantage, even as structural barriers persisted. These findings support the development of structured communication approaches in nephrology care that invite discussion of disease trajectory, daily life impacts, and emotional concerns.

Article activity feed