Abstract

This study investigated the critical care staff’s attitude, knowledge and involvement with donation, skills and confidence with donation-related tasks and their association with consent rates at the hospital level. In 2015, we conducted a cross-sectional survey among critical care staff of hospitals involved in organ donation using an anonymous online questionnaire with a response rate of 56.4% (n = 2799). The hospital level consent rate was obtained from the Swiss Monitoring of Potential Donors database (2013–2015). For each hospital, we calculated a mean score for each predictor of interest of the Hospital Attitude Survey and investigated the association with hospital consent rates with generalized linear mixed-effect models. In univariable analysis, one score point increase in doctors' confidence resulted in a 66% (95% CI: 45%–80%) reduction in the odds to consent, and one score point increase in nurses' attitudes resulted in a 223% (95% CI: 84%–472%) increase in the odds to consent. After simultaneously adjusting for all major predictors found in the crude models, only levels of education of medical and nursing staff remained as significant predictors for hospital consent rates. In Switzerland, efforts are needed to increase consent rates for organ donation and should concentrate on continuous support as well as specific training of the hospital staff involved in the donation process.

Highlights

  • IntroductionSwitzerland has had a low post mortem donation rate compared to other developed countries for over a decade [2]

  • Organ shortage is a global problem [1]

  • This study aimed to investigate the critical care staff’s attitude, knowledge and involvement with donation, skills and how comfortable they feel with donation-related tasks and if there is a correlation with consent rates

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Switzerland has had a low post mortem donation rate compared to other developed countries for over a decade [2]. Consent rates and critical care staffs’ attitudes and education organ transplantation is steadily increasing and there is a chronic imbalance between the number of donors and the number of patients on the waiting lists. The attitude, knowledge, skills and educational needs of the critical care (CC) staff is one element that may influence donation rates and which has not been evaluated in Switzerland since 2008 [3]. It was confirmed that there is a link between the attitude of the CC staff, acceptance of the brain death concept and confidence in the subject of organ donation and a successful conversion from potential to actual donors [3]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call