Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Mortality outcomes for Māori requiring renal replacement therapy during critical illness: a single unit audit in Aotearoa New Zealand
View through CrossRef
AbstractBackgroundMāori in New Zealand (NZ) are disproportionately affected by chronic kidney disease (CKD) and experience lower life expectancy on community dialysis compared with non‐Māori. We previously identified a higher renal replacement therapy (RRT) requirement for Māori in our intensive care unit (ICU), the tertiary referral centre for NZ's Te Manawa Taki region.AimTo describe mortality outcomes by ethnicity in the population requiring RRT in our ICU.MethodsRetrospective audit of the Australia and NZ Intensive Care Society database for adult admissions to our general ICU from Te Manawa Taki between 2014 and 2018. Patients were stratified by non‐RRT requirement (non‐RRT), RRT‐requiring acute kidney injury (AKI‐RRT) and RRT‐requiring end‐stage renal disease (ESRD).ResultsRelative to the population of Te Manawa Taki, Māori were over‐represented across all strata, especially ESRD (61.8%), followed by AKI‐RRT (35.0%) and non‐RRT (32.4%) (P < 0.001). There was no excess mortality by ethnicity in any stratum. Crude in‐ICU mortality was similar by ethnicity among AKI‐RRT (30.8% among Māori, vs 31.5%; P = 1.000) and ESRD (16.4% among Māori, vs 20.6%; P = 0.826). This trend remained at 1 year. Adjusted for clinically selected variables, neither AKI‐RRT nor ESRD mortality was predicted by Māori ethnicity, both in‐ICU and at 1 year. Irrespective of ethnicity, AKI‐RRT patients had highest in‐ICU mortality (31.2%; P < 0.001), while ESRD had highest 1‐year mortality (46.1%; P < 0.001).ConclusionIncreased RRT requirement among Māori in our ICU is due to higher representation among ESRD. We did not demonstrate excess mortality by ethnicity in any stratum. AKI‐RRT had higher in‐ICU mortality than ESRD, but this reversed at 1 year.
Title: Mortality outcomes for Māori requiring renal replacement therapy during critical illness: a single unit audit in Aotearoa New Zealand
Description:
AbstractBackgroundMāori in New Zealand (NZ) are disproportionately affected by chronic kidney disease (CKD) and experience lower life expectancy on community dialysis compared with non‐Māori.
We previously identified a higher renal replacement therapy (RRT) requirement for Māori in our intensive care unit (ICU), the tertiary referral centre for NZ's Te Manawa Taki region.
AimTo describe mortality outcomes by ethnicity in the population requiring RRT in our ICU.
MethodsRetrospective audit of the Australia and NZ Intensive Care Society database for adult admissions to our general ICU from Te Manawa Taki between 2014 and 2018.
Patients were stratified by non‐RRT requirement (non‐RRT), RRT‐requiring acute kidney injury (AKI‐RRT) and RRT‐requiring end‐stage renal disease (ESRD).
ResultsRelative to the population of Te Manawa Taki, Māori were over‐represented across all strata, especially ESRD (61.
8%), followed by AKI‐RRT (35.
0%) and non‐RRT (32.
4%) (P < 0.
001).
There was no excess mortality by ethnicity in any stratum.
Crude in‐ICU mortality was similar by ethnicity among AKI‐RRT (30.
8% among Māori, vs 31.
5%; P = 1.
000) and ESRD (16.
4% among Māori, vs 20.
6%; P = 0.
826).
This trend remained at 1 year.
Adjusted for clinically selected variables, neither AKI‐RRT nor ESRD mortality was predicted by Māori ethnicity, both in‐ICU and at 1 year.
Irrespective of ethnicity, AKI‐RRT patients had highest in‐ICU mortality (31.
2%; P < 0.
001), while ESRD had highest 1‐year mortality (46.
1%; P < 0.
001).
ConclusionIncreased RRT requirement among Māori in our ICU is due to higher representation among ESRD.
We did not demonstrate excess mortality by ethnicity in any stratum.
AKI‐RRT had higher in‐ICU mortality than ESRD, but this reversed at 1 year.
Related Results
Maori Values Can Reinvigorate a New Zealand Philosophy
Maori Values Can Reinvigorate a New Zealand Philosophy
<p>This thesis explores Maori values that can be seen in traditional Maori philosophy and attempts to define those values and how they are recognizable in Aotearoa/New Zealan...
Maori Education Developments: A Maori Unionist’s View
Maori Education Developments: A Maori Unionist’s View
During 1992, many hands seized the chance to paddle the Maori education waka in the primary system.The Maori community continued to establish Kura Kaupapa Maori, immersion and bi...
Māori Art and Architecture
Māori Art and Architecture
Maori art history originates in Te Po/The Darkness when the parents Ranginui/Sky Father and Papatūānuku/Earth Mother were joined. They were later separated by some of their sons wh...
Paper K-9 Pelaporan Hasil Audit dan Tindak Lanjut Audit Internal
Paper K-9 Pelaporan Hasil Audit dan Tindak Lanjut Audit Internal
Pelaporan hasil audit merupakan komponen utama dalam komunikasi dari audit internal tentang hasil audit. Untuk mengkomunikasikan hasil audit diperlukan susunan laporan, dimana hasi...
Māori Academic Challenges: Delivering Mātauranga Māori During COVID-19
Māori Academic Challenges: Delivering Mātauranga Māori During COVID-19
In March 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted academic educational programmes in universities across the world, including Aotearoa New Zealand. For Māori academics who implement m...
Kia Tomokia Te Kākahu O Te Reo Māori: He whakamahere i ngā kōwhiri reo a te reo rua Māori
Kia Tomokia Te Kākahu O Te Reo Māori: He whakamahere i ngā kōwhiri reo a te reo rua Māori
<p>Kua eke te hunga kōrero Māori ki tōna 150,000 te rahi i te tau 2013 (Statistics New Zealand). Ahakoa tērā, kāore tonu i te kaha kōrerotia te reo Māori. Kei roto i te whak...
Māori health outcomes in an intensive care unit in Aotearoa New Zealand
Māori health outcomes in an intensive care unit in Aotearoa New Zealand
Māori are the indigenous people of New Zealand, and suffer disparate health outcomes compared to non-Māori. Waikato District Health Board provides level III intensive care unit ser...
Tangata Ngākau: Māori Boys and Masculinity in the Writing of Bruce Stewart, Witi Ihimaera, and Whiti Hereaka
Tangata Ngākau: Māori Boys and Masculinity in the Writing of Bruce Stewart, Witi Ihimaera, and Whiti Hereaka
<p>This thesis surveys a selection of writing by Bruce Stewart, Witi Ihimaera, and Whiti Hereaka, and considers how these texts represent varying modes of masculinity availab...

