The experiences of family members of deceased organ donors and suggestions to improve the donation process : a qualitative study

Article

SARTI, Aimee J. | SUTHERLAND, Stephanie | MEADE, Maureen | SHEMIE, Sam | LANDRIAULT, Angele | VANDERSPANK-WRIGHT, Brandi | VALIANI, Sabira | KEENAN, Sean | WEISS, Matthew J. | WERESTIUK, Kim | KRAMER, Andreas H. | KAWCHUK, Joann | BEED, Stephen | DHANANI, Sonny | PAGLIARELLO, Giuseppe | CHASSE, Michaël | LOTHERINGTON, Ken | GATIEN, Mary | PARSONS, Kim | CHANDLER, Jennifer A. | NICKERSON, Peter | CARDINAL, Pierre | CANADIAN CRITICAL CARE TRIALS GROUP

BACKGROUND: Decisions about organ donation are stressful for family members of potential organ donors. We sought to comprehensively explore the donation process from interviews conducted with family members of patients admitted to pediatric and adult intensive care units in Canada. METHODS: We conducted a qualitative study using semistructured, in-depth interviews with 271 family members asked to make an organ donation decision. We recruited participants from all provinces with an organ donation organization (n = 10), and analyzed themes using a modified grounded theory approach. On the basis of these interviews, suggestions were made by researchers and family members on how to improve the process of organ donation. RESULTS: We identified 3 main themes and 9 subthemes. Families need more comprehensive support around the time of donation, including having access to someone with shared experiences, support during specific moments as needed and better support during critical transitions (e.g., when the donor body goes to the operating room). The theme of better connection to recipient(s) included receiving information about the donation surgery (e.g., which organs were recovered), establishing connection with recipients (e.g., via social networks or letters) and planned encounters. Support after donation, such as updates on organ transplantation, early mental health checks and continued connection to donor organizations, could be improved. We derived 20 suggestions for improving the organ donation process, derived from interviews with family members of pediatric and adult organ donors. INTERPRETATION: We found gaps in family support during end-of-life and donation care. Feelings of abandonment, lack of support and poor-to-little follow-up provide the empirical findings needed for hospitals and organ donor organizations to provide better support to donor families.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1503/cmaj.220508

Voir la revue «CMAJ, 194»

Autres numéros de la revue «CMAJ»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

The experiences of family members of deceased...

Article indépendant | SARTI, Aimee J. | CMAJ | n°30 | vol.194

BACKGROUND: Decisions about organ donation are stressful for family members of potential organ donors. We sought to comprehensively explore the donation process from interviews conducted with family members of patients admitted to...

The experiences of family members of deceased...

Article indépendant | SARTI, Aimee J. | CMAJ | n°30 | vol.194

BACKGROUND: Decisions about organ donation are stressful for family members of potential organ donors. We sought to comprehensively explore the donation process from interviews conducted with family members of patients admitted to...

Survey on barriers to critical care and palli...

Article indépendant | KYEREMANTENG, Kwadwo | The American journal of hospice and palliative care | n°2 | vol.37

PURPOSE: It has been shown that integrating palliative care (PC) in intensive care unit (ICU) improves end-of-life care (EOLC), but very few Canadian hospitals have adopted this practice. Our study aims to evaluate the perceived q...

De la même série

Deceased organ and tissue donation after medi...

Article | WIEBE, Kim | CMAJ | n°25 | vol.195

BACKGROUND: Since Canadian Blood Services (CBS) developed policy guidance in 2019 for organ and tissue donation after medical assistance in dying (MAiD), the federal government has made changes to legislation related to MAiD. This...

The experiences of family members of deceased...

Article | SARTI, Aimee J. | CMAJ | n°30 | vol.194

BACKGROUND: Decisions about organ donation are stressful for family members of potential organ donors. We sought to comprehensively explore the donation process from interviews conducted with family members of patients admitted to...

Regional collaborative home-based palliative ...

Article | QUINN, Kieran L. | CMAJ | n°37 | vol.194

Background: Innovative models of collaborative palliative care are urgently needed to meet gaps in end-of-life care among people with heart failure. We sought to determine whether regionally organized, collaborative, home-based pa...

Désactivation des défibrillateurs cardioverte...

Article | WAN, Darryl | CMAJ | n°33 | vol.193

Environ 7000 défibrillateurs cardioverteurs implantables (DCI) sont posés chaque année au Canada pour prévenir la mort subite. Or, à un moment, il se peut que les préférences des patients changent et que les objectifs de soins obé...

Chargement des enrichissements...