Albright Cheryl L, Wong Linda L, Dela Cruz May Rose, Sagayadoro Tony
Prevention and Control Program, Cancer Research Center of Hawaii, University of Hawaii, Honolulu 96813, USA.
Prog Transplant. 2010 Dec;20(4):392-400. doi: 10.1177/152692481002000413.
The factors associated with Asian American and Pacific Islander adolescents' decision to be a designated organ donor on their first driver's license are largely unknown.
To assess knowledge and attitudes about organ donation and sociocultural factors associated with designated organ donor status in Asian American and Pacific Islander youth in Hawaii.
Written surveys and focus groups were conducted at high schools and churches.
Two hundred eight Asian American and Pacific Islander teens, mean age 16 (SD, 2) years, 52.6% females, and 53.4% Catholic.
Donor status on driver's license, awareness, attitudes, intentions, and barriers to becoming a designated organ donor.
Eighteen percent of teens with a driver's license are designated organ donors. Twenty-one percent have talked to their parents about becoming a designated donor on their license. Of those without a license, 27.7% intended to become a designated donor. Sex, grade level, and immigrant status were not associated with designated organ donor status; however, Catholics were significantly less likely to be donors. Key barriers to being a designated donor included a lack of knowledge or misperceptions due to urban myths about organ donation, parents completing "organ donor" question on driver's license application, and not wanting to have their body "cut up."
Future organ donor campaigns should educate ethnic minority adolescents about the importance of becoming a designated organ donor on their first driver's license and counter urban myths about deceased organ donation. Guidelines for how to initiate family discussions about organ donation should be sensitive to cultural and religious beliefs.
与亚裔美国人和太平洋岛民青少年在首次获得驾照时决定成为指定器官捐赠者相关的因素在很大程度上尚不明确。
评估夏威夷亚裔美国人和太平洋岛民青少年对器官捐赠的知识和态度,以及与指定器官捐赠者身份相关的社会文化因素。
在高中和教堂进行书面调查和焦点小组讨论。
208名亚裔美国人和太平洋岛民青少年,平均年龄16岁(标准差为2岁),52.6%为女性,53.4%为天主教徒。
驾照上的捐赠者身份、对成为指定器官捐赠者的知晓度、态度、意愿及障碍。
拥有驾照的青少年中,18%是指定器官捐赠者。21%的人曾与父母谈论过在驾照上成为指定捐赠者的事情。在没有驾照的青少年中,27.7%打算成为指定捐赠者。性别、年级和移民身份与指定器官捐赠者身份无关;然而,天主教徒成为捐赠者的可能性显著较低。成为指定捐赠者的主要障碍包括因器官捐赠的都市传说而缺乏知识或存在误解、父母在驾照申请表上填写“器官捐赠者”问题,以及不想让自己的身体“被切开”。
未来的器官捐赠宣传活动应向少数族裔青少年宣传在首次获得驾照时成为指定器官捐赠者的重要性,并反驳有关已故器官捐赠的都市传说。关于如何启动家庭器官捐赠讨论的指南应考虑到文化和宗教信仰。