Sarah
Sarah learned she had chronic kidney disease stage 3 after requesting printouts of recent routine blood test results. She felt angry that her GP had not told her about this and although later advised not to worry about it she feels a need to know more.
Sarah has experienced chronic back pain for several years, which she attributes to general wear and tear associated with her career as a physiotherapist and her gardening hobby. She has a painful right foot after bunion surgery four years ago. She takes thyroxine for an underactive thyroid gland and has a blood test to check her thyroid hormone levels once a year. She has low blood pressure and high cholesterol but has declined to take statins because she believes the harms outweigh the benefits. She feels tired a lot of the time and that tiredness is increasing. She looked after her husband for three years while he was treated for cancer but has to help him less now that he is in remission. They have some help with gardening and other household tasks.
A few months ago Sarah had two kidney infections one after the other, which were investigated with blood and urine tests. She had a kidney scan and was treated with antibiotics. After this her chronic back pain seemed worse so she asked for a referral to a specialist. She asked for a copy of the referral letter and any recent blood test results. She was amazed to see a comment on the blood result form from her last test six months ago saying, Please inform patient CKD stage 3′. She knew that CKD stood for chronic kidney disease, and was angry because she had not been told about this by her doctor.
She went to a walk-in casual clinic to ask her GP about this, who explained that CKD affects many older people, that it was nothing to worry about and that she hadn’t been told because there was little they could do about it anyway. Sarah felt reassured for about 10 minutes but then decided she needed to know more about it, so she contacted some of the kidney charities for information. She wants to know what she could do to help prevent it progressing to a serious condition, whether she should adapt her diet, see a kidney specialist, or ask for regular tests. Sarah suggests that she might have felt more reassured if the GP had invited her to make a longer appointment to discuss the kidney problem and how it should be managed.
Sarah was prescribed anti-inflammatory drugs for her back pain but has since learned from the charity information that such drugs are not recommended for people with kidney problems; she now takes paracetamol and aspirin instead. Her pain is preventing her from being as active as she would like, so she is concerned that she is becoming unfit and that her health is crumbling’. She likes to be proactive about her health, so is trying to investigate what can be done about her various health problems.