Okan University, Department of Business Administration, Tuzla Campus, 34959 Akfirat, Istanbul, Turkey.
Health Policy. 2013 May;110(2-3):229-42. doi: 10.1016/j.healthpol.2012.12.014. Epub 2013 Jan 21.
This article investigates the impact of legal determinants of cadaveric and living donor organ transplantation rates using panel data on legislative, procedural and managerial aspects of organ transplantation and procurement, government health expenditures, enrollment rates, religious beliefs, legal systems and civil rights and liberties for 62 countries over a 2-year period. Under living donor organ transplantation, we found that guaranteeing traceability of organs by law or performing psychiatric evaluation to living donors has a sizeable, negative impact on living transplant rates once the remaining determinants of living transplantation have been controlled for. Under cadaveric transplantation, our findings do not suggest an unequivocal and positive association between presumed consent, donor registries and cadaveric transplant rates. However, legally requiring family consent or maintaining written procurement standards for deceased donors has a sizeable, negative impact on cadaveric transplant rates. The latter finding suggests that informing families rather than asking for consent may be an effective strategy to raise procurement rates while respecting patient autonomy. Finally, we confirm that predominantly non-Christian countries have significantly higher living but lower cadaveric transplant rates.
本文利用 62 个国家两年间的立法、程序和管理方面的器官移植和获取、政府卫生支出、登记率、宗教信仰、法律制度和公民权利和自由的面板数据,调查了法律因素对尸体和活体供体器官移植率的影响。在活体供体器官移植方面,我们发现,一旦控制了活体移植的其他决定因素,法律上保证器官的可追溯性或对活体供体进行精神评估,对活体移植率有相当大的负面影响。在尸体器官移植方面,我们的研究结果并不表明推定同意、供体登记册与尸体器官移植率之间存在明确的正相关关系。然而,法律上要求家属同意或为已故供体保持书面获取标准,对尸体器官移植率有相当大的负面影响。这一发现表明,在尊重患者自主权的同时,通知家属而不是征求其同意可能是提高获取率的有效策略。最后,我们证实,主要是非基督教国家的活体器官移植率显著较高,但尸体器官移植率较低。