Bereaved family members' perspectives of their organ donation decision at 3 months post death of the donor-eligible patient in critical care : a dual-method study

Article indépendant

POTTER, Julie E. | PERRY, Lin | ELLIOTT, Rosalind M. | COMFORT INVESTIGATORS

BACKGROUND: Offering organ donation is part of routine end-of-life care in critical care. Families describe feeling emotionally overwhelmed, which reduces their ability to understand complex medical information necessary to make informed decisions about organ donation. Late decisional regret is more common among families who decline donation. Thus, it is vital to investigate whether the organ donation decision choices that families make in hospital endure unchanged and what factors affect their perspectives. OBJECTIVES: The objective of this study was to explore family members' perspectives of their final organ donation decision in hospital, either to consent or to decline donation, at around 90 d later. METHODS: This dual-method study comprised semistructured interviews of family members of donor-eligible patients who experienced care in seven metropolitan teaching hospitals, a tertiary paediatric hospital, and a major regional hospital in New South Wales, Australia. Interviews were audio recorded and transcribed verbatim. Descriptive quantitative analysis and thematic analysis were used. FINDINGS: Participants overwhelmingly agreed that their organ donation decision remained unchanged at 3 months after the death of their relative (n = 127, 97%). The remainder (n = 3, 2%) were unsure or stated "possibly not" (n = 1, 1%); in these cases, the eligible donor was certified dead via circulatory criteria. Five themes were synthesised in relation to the organ donation decision: Knowledge of the donor-eligible patient's prior wishes, Family members' prior decision to donate their own organs, Solace in the decision, Altruism, and Reality of the process. CONCLUSIONS: The organ donation decision choice remained unchanged for the large majority. Further research is required to ascertain how people can be assisted to understand the organ donation process, particularly in the setting of certification of death by circulatory criteria, and how best to positively influence consent rates. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRY NUMBER: Australian and New Zealand Clinical Trial Registration ACTRN12613000815763.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aucc.2024.10.001

Voir la revue «Australian critical care»

Autres numéros de la revue «Australian critical care»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Bereaved family members' perspectives of thei...

Article | POTTER, Julie E. | Australian critical care

BACKGROUND: Offering organ donation is part of routine end-of-life care in critical care. Families describe feeling emotionally overwhelmed, which reduces their ability to understand complex medical information necessary to make i...

De la même série

Critical care nurses' responses to clinical s...

Article indépendant | HUI, Heidi Hoi Ying | Australian critical care | n°4 | vol.38

BACKGROUND: Current Australian resuscitation training focusses on the practical application of cardiopulmonary resuscitation but lacks clarity on when it is inappropriate. Nurses are often first responders to inpatient emergencies...

Development and implementation of a clinical ...

Article indépendant | PACHCHIGAR, R. | Australian critical care

BACKGROUND: Patients treated in Australian intensive care units (ICUs) have an overall mortality rate of 5.05%. This is due to the critical nature of their disease, the increasing proportion of patients with multiple comorbidities...

A national position statement on adult end-of...

Article indépendant | BLOOMER, Melissa J. | Australian critical care

Patient death in critical care is not uncommon. Rather, the provision of end-of-life care is a core feature of critical care nursing, yet not all nurses feel adequately prepared for their role in the provision of end-of-life care....

Healthcare professionals' knowledge, skills, ...

Article indépendant | RIEGEL, Melissa | Australian critical care

BACKGROUND: An activity to provide a tangible keepsake following the death of a loved one is termed 'memory making'. However, limited evidence is available related to professionals' education and support to provide memory making o...

Emergency department and intensive care unit ...

Article indépendant | HEWITT, Jayne | Australian critical care

Background: Laws that regulate healthcare practice at the end of life reflect the values of the society where they apply. Traditionally, healthcare professionals rely on their clinical knowledge to inform treatment decisions, but ...

Chargement des enrichissements...