Inthorn Julia, Wöhlke Sabine, Schmidt Fabian, Schicktanz Silke
Department of Medical Ethics and History of Medicine, University Medical Center Göttingen, Humboldtallee 36, 37073 Göttingen, Germany.
BMC Med Ethics. 2014 Jul 5;15:56. doi: 10.1186/1472-6939-15-56.
There is an ongoing expert debate with regard to financial incentives in order to increase organ supply. However, there is a lacuna of empirical studies on whether citizens would actually support financial incentives for organ donation.
Between October 2008 and February 2009 a quantitative survey was conducted among German students of medicine and economics to gain insights into their point of view regarding living and deceased organ donation and different forms of commercialization (n = 755).
The average (passive) willingness to donate is 63.5% among medical students and 50.0% among students of economics (p = 0.001), while only 24.1% of the respondents were actually holding an organ donor card. 11.3% of students of economics had signed a donor card, however, the number is significantly higher among students of medicine (31.9%, p < 0.001). Women held donor cards significantly more often (28.6%) than men (19.4%, p = 0.004). The majority of students were against direct payments as incentives for deceased and living donations. Nevertheless, 37.5% of the respondents support the idea that the funeral expenses of deceased organ donors should be covered. Women voted significantly less often for the coverage of expenses than men (women 31.6%, men 44.0%, p = 0.003). The number of those in favor of allowing to sell one's organs for money (living organ donation) was highest among students of economics (p = 0.034).
Despite a generally positive view on organ donation the respondents refuse to consent to commercialization, but are in favor of removing disincentives or are in favor of indirect models of reward.
关于为增加器官供应而提供经济激励措施,专家们一直争论不休。然而,对于公民是否会真正支持器官捐赠的经济激励措施,实证研究存在空白。
2008年10月至2009年2月,对德国医学和经济学专业的学生进行了一项定量调查,以了解他们对活体和尸体器官捐赠以及不同形式商业化的看法(n = 755)。
医学生中平均(被动)捐赠意愿为63.5%,经济学专业学生为50.0%(p = 0.001),而实际持有器官捐赠卡的受访者仅占24.1%。11.3%的经济学专业学生签署了捐赠卡,不过,医学生中的这一比例显著更高(31.9%,p < 0.001)。女性持有捐赠卡的比例显著高于男性(28.6%对19.4%,p = 0.004)。大多数学生反对将直接付款作为尸体和活体捐赠的激励措施。尽管如此,37.5%的受访者支持支付已故器官捐赠者葬礼费用的想法。女性投票支持费用支付的比例显著低于男性(女性31.6%,男性44.0%,p = 0.003)。支持允许出售自己器官(活体器官捐赠)的人数在经济学专业学生中最多(p = 0.034)。
尽管对器官捐赠总体看法积极,但受访者拒绝同意商业化,但赞成消除不利因素或支持间接奖励模式。