Tumin Makmor, Tafran Khaled, Tang Li Yoong, Chong Mei Chan, Mohd Jaafar Noor Ismawati, Mohd Satar NurulHuda, Abdullah Nurhidayah
From the Department of Administrative Studies and Politics (MT), Universiti Malaya; Institute of Research Management and Monitoring (KT), Universiti Malaya; Department of Nursing (TLY, CMC), Universiti Malaya; Department of Applied Statistics (NIMJ), Universiti Malaya; Department of Economics (NMS, NA), Universiti Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
Medicine (Baltimore). 2016 Mar;95(12):e3178. doi: 10.1097/MD.0000000000003178.
Malaysia suffers from a chronic shortage of human organs for transplantation. Medical and nursing students (MaNS) are future health professionals and thus their attitude toward organ donation is vital for driving national donation rates. This study investigates MaNS' willingness to donate organs upon death and the factors influencing their willingness. A cross-sectional design was used with a sample of 500 students (264 medical and 236 nursing) at the University of Malaya. A self-administrated questionnaire was used. The responses were analyzed by using descriptive statistics and multiple logistic regression. Of all respondents, 278 (55.6%) were willing to donate organs upon death, while the remaining 222 (44.4%) were unwilling to donate. Only 44 (8.8%) had donor cards. The multiple logistic regression revealed that the minorities ethnic group was more willing to donate organs than Malay respondents (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] = 1.98, P = 0.010). In addition, medical students were more willing to donate than nursing students (aOR = 2.53, P = 0.000). Respondents who have a family member with a donor card were more willing to donate than respondents who do not (aOR = 3.48, P = 0.006). MaNS who believed that their religion permits deceased donation were more willing to donate than their counterparts (aOR = 4.96, P = 0.000). Household income and sex were not significant predictors of MaNS' willingness to donate organs upon death. MaNS have moderate willingness, but low commitment toward deceased organ donation. Strategies for improving MaNS' attitude should better educate them on organ donation, targeting the most the Malay and nursing students, and should consider the influence of family attitude and religious permissibility on MaNS' willingness.
马来西亚长期面临人体器官移植供体短缺的问题。医学和护理专业学生是未来的医疗保健专业人员,因此他们对器官捐赠的态度对于推动全国的捐赠率至关重要。本研究调查了医学和护理专业学生在死后捐赠器官的意愿以及影响其意愿的因素。采用横断面设计,对马来亚大学的500名学生(264名医学专业和236名护理专业)进行了抽样调查。使用了一份自填式问卷。通过描述性统计和多元逻辑回归对回答进行分析。在所有受访者中,278人(55.6%)愿意在死后捐赠器官,其余222人(44.4%)不愿意捐赠。只有44人(8.8%)持有捐赠卡。多元逻辑回归显示,少数族裔比马来受访者更愿意捐赠器官(调整优势比[aOR]=1.98,P=0.010)。此外,医学专业学生比护理专业学生更愿意捐赠(aOR=2.53,P=0.000)。有家庭成员持有捐赠卡的受访者比没有的受访者更愿意捐赠(aOR=3.48,P=0.006)。认为其宗教允许死后捐赠的医学和护理专业学生比其他学生更愿意捐赠(aOR=4.96,P=0.000)。家庭收入和性别并不是医学和护理专业学生死后捐赠器官意愿的显著预测因素。医学和护理专业学生对死后器官捐赠有中等意愿,但承诺度较低。改善医学和护理专业学生态度的策略应更好地对他们进行器官捐赠教育,重点针对马来和护理专业学生,并应考虑家庭态度和宗教许可对医学和护理专业学生意愿的影响。