Ladin Keren, Wang Rui, Fleishman Aaron, Boger Matthew, Rodrigue James R
Tufts University.
Tufts University Medical School.
Milbank Q. 2015 Sep;93(3):609-41. doi: 10.1111/1468-0009.12139.
The growing shortage of life-saving organs has reached unprecedented levels, with more than 120,000 Americans waiting for them. Despite national attempts to increase organ donation and federal laws mandating the equitable allocation of organs, geographic disparities remain. A better understanding of the contextual determinants of organ donor designation, including social capital, may enhance efforts to increase organ donation by raising the probability of collective action and fostering norms of reciprocity and cooperation while increasing costs to defectors. Because community-level factors, including social capital, predict more than half the variation in donor designation, future interventions should tailor strategies to specific communities as the unit of intervention.
The growing shortage of organs has reached unprecedented levels. Despite national attempts to increase donation and federal laws mandating the equitable allocation of organs, their availability and waiting times vary significantly nationwide. Organ donor designation is a collective action problem in public health, in which the regional organ supply and average waiting times are determined by the willingness of individuals to be listed as organ donors. Social capital increases the probability of collective action by fostering norms of reciprocity and cooperation while increasing costs to defectors. We examine whether social capital and other community-level factors explain geographic variation in organ donor designation rates in Massachusetts.
We obtained a sample of 3,281,532 registered drivers in 2010 from the Massachusetts Department of Transportation Registry of Motor Vehicles (MassDOT RMV). We then geocoded the registry data, matched them to 4,466 census blocks, and linked them to the 2010 US Census, the American Community Survey (ACS), and other sources to obtain community-level sociodemographic, social capital (residential segregation, voter registration and participation, residential mobility, violent-death rate), and religious characteristics. We used spatial modeling, including lagged variables to account for the effect of adjacent block groups, and multivariate regression analysis to examine the relationship of social capital and community-level characteristics with organ donor designation rates.
Block groups with higher levels of social capital, racial homogeneity, income, workforce participation, owner-occupied housing, native-born residents, and white residents had higher rates of organ donor designation (p < 0.001). These factors remained significant in the multivariate model, which explained more than half the geographic variance in organ donor designation (R(2) = 0.52).
The findings suggest that community-level factors, including social capital, predict more than half the variation in donor designation. Future interventions should target the community as the unit of intervention and should tailor messaging for areas with low social capital.
拯救生命的器官短缺问题日益严重,已达到前所未有的程度,超过12万美国人在等待器官。尽管国家努力增加器官捐赠,且联邦法律要求公平分配器官,但地域差异仍然存在。更好地理解器官捐赠者指定的背景决定因素,包括社会资本,可能会通过提高集体行动的可能性、培养互惠与合作规范以及增加背叛者的成本,来加强增加器官捐赠的努力。由于包括社会资本在内的社区层面因素能预测超过一半的捐赠者指定差异,未来的干预措施应以特定社区为干预单位来制定策略。
器官短缺问题日益严重,已达到前所未有的程度。尽管国家努力增加捐赠,且联邦法律要求公平分配器官,但器官的可获得性和等待时间在全国范围内差异很大。器官捐赠者指定是公共卫生领域的一个集体行动问题,其中区域器官供应和平均等待时间取决于个人被列为器官捐赠者的意愿。社会资本通过培养互惠与合作规范以及增加背叛者的成本,提高了集体行动的可能性。我们研究社会资本和其他社区层面因素是否能解释马萨诸塞州器官捐赠者指定率的地理差异。
我们从马萨诸塞州交通运输部机动车登记处(MassDOT RMV)获取了2010年3,281,532名注册驾驶员的样本。然后,我们对登记数据进行地理编码,将其与4,466个人口普查街区匹配,并将它们与2010年美国人口普查、美国社区调查(ACS)和其他来源相链接,以获取社区层面的社会人口统计学、社会资本(居住隔离、选民登记和参与、居住流动性、暴力死亡率)和宗教特征。我们使用空间建模,包括滞后变量来考虑相邻街区组的影响,并使用多元回归分析来研究社会资本和社区层面特征与器官捐赠者指定率之间的关系。
社会资本水平较高、种族同质性较高、收入较高、劳动力参与率较高、自有住房、本地出生居民和白人居民的街区组,器官捐赠者指定率较高(p < 0.001)。这些因素在多元模型中仍然显著,该模型解释了器官捐赠者指定中超过一半的地理差异(R(2) = 0.52)。
研究结果表明,包括社会资本在内的社区层面因素能预测超过一半的捐赠者指定差异。未来的干预措施应以社区为干预单位,并应为社会资本较低的地区量身定制信息。