Perspectives of Renal Healthcare Professionals about Deceased Organ Donation

Authors

  • Ann Andrews, MPH
  • Caitlin Loughery, MPH
  • Nanhua Zhang, PhD
  • Allyce Haney Smith, MSW
  • Holly Jenkins Riley, MSW
  • Sheri Stav, MSW
  • Ken Resnicow, PhD
  • Remonia Chapman, BS
  • Jerry Yee, MD

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.61658/jnsw.v42i2.39

Abstract

Little is known about the attitudes of renal healthcare professionals (HCPs) toward deceased donation. We surveyed 222 renal HCPs from 12 dialysis units in southeast Michigan about their attitudes toward organ donation as part of a cluster-randomized, intervention study. Factor analysis identified three subscales: general benefits (alpha .88), general barriers (alpha .80), and staff dialysis barriers (alpha .79). We compared subscale values with two variables: enrollment status in the state donor registry (DR) and intentions for future DR enrollment. Higher scores on all three scales were positively associated with DR enrollment. Mean scores varied by HCP role within the dialysis unit. Tailoring donation education to a role and focusing on the benefits may have an effective impact on HCP attitudes. Results from this study can inform future interventions to improve promotion of organ donation amongst professionals working in dialysis units.

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Published

2023-10-10

How to Cite

Andrews, MPH, A., Loughery, MPH, C., Zhang, PhD, N., Haney Smith, MSW, A., Jenkins Riley, MSW, H., Stav, MSW, S., … Yee, MD, J. (2023). Perspectives of Renal Healthcare Professionals about Deceased Organ Donation. The Journal of Nephrology Social Work, 42(2). https://doi.org/10.61658/jnsw.v42i2.39

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