Abstract

Organ failure is one cause of death. Advancements in scientific research and technological development made organ transplantation possible and continue to find better ways to substitute failed organs with other organs of biological origin or artificial organs. Media, including newspapers, are one source of information for the public. The purpose of this study was to examine to what extent and how science and technology research and development are covered in the organ transplantation and organ donation (ODOT) coverage of n = 300 Canadian newspapers, including the two Canadian newspapers with national reach (The Globe and Mail, National Post). The study generated qualitative and quantitative data addressing the following issues: (1) which scientific and technological developments are mentioned in the ODOT coverage; and (2) what issues are mentioned in the coverage of scientific and technological advancements linked to ODOT. We found little to no coverage of many technological and scientific advancements evident in academic and grey literature covering ODOT, and we found little engagement with social and ethical issues already raised about these advancements in the literature. The only area we found to be covered to a broader extent was xenotransplantation, although the coverage stopped after 2002. We argue that the newspaper coverage of ODOT under reports scientific and technological advancements related to ODOT and the issues these advancements might raise.

Highlights

  • Organ failure is one cause of death

  • “organ donation” in the full text. These articles where searched in the second step for the scientific research and technological development (SRTD) that we identified in Stage 1, and the results were recorded in 10-year sections to show a historical timeline of mentioning of the SRTDs within the organ donation and organ transplantation (ODOT)-mentioning articles (Tables A1–A3 at end of article after the references)

  • Our study reveals a puzzling disconnect between ODOT coverage and the coverage of scientific and technological advancements used in ODOT; for example, the National Post had n = 79 articles that covered the technological advancements of artificial hearts

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Summary

Introduction

Advancements in scientific research and technological development (SRTD) made organ transplantation possible [1,2,3,4,5,6], and SRTD efforts are constantly under way to better the outcome of organ transplantations. No study has looked at ODOT media coverage through science and technology narratives

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