Sydney School of Public Health, The University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Centre for Kidney Research, The Children's Hospital at Westmead, Westmead, New South Wales, Australia.
Clin J Am Soc Nephrol. 2017 Nov 7;12(11):1852-1861. doi: 10.2215/CJN.03550417. Epub 2017 Oct 9.
Comprehensive evaluations are required to safeguard voluntarism and minimize harm to living kidney donors. This process is lengthy, invasive, and emotionally challenging, with up to one fifth of potential donors opting out. We aimed to describe donors' experiences of the evaluation process.
DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTS: We conducted 14 focus groups involving 123 kidney donors who completed donation from three transplant centers (Australia and Canada). Transcripts were analyzed thematically.
We identified six themes reflecting donors' experiences of evaluation. The themes that related to perseverance included emotional investment (prioritizing the recipient's health, desperation for a normal life, protecting eligibility, shame of disappointing others, and overcoming opposition), undeterred by low risks (medical confidence and protection, worthwhile gamble, inherent invincibility, and normalizing risks), and mental preparation (avoiding regret, resolving decisional ambivalence, and managing expectations of recovery). The challenges included underlying fears for health (processing alarming information, unsettling uncertainty, and preoperative panic), system shortfalls (self-advocacy in driving the process, stressful urgency, inconsistent framing of safety, unnerving bodily scrutiny, questioning risk information, and draining finances); and lifestyle interference (living in limbo, onerous lifestyle disruption, and valuing flexibility).
Previous donors described an emotional investment in donating and determination to protect their eligibility, despite having concerns for their health, financial and lifestyle disruption, and opposition from their family or community. Our findings suggest the need to prepare donors for surgery and recovery, minimize anxiety and lifestyle burdens, ensure that donors feel comfortable expressing their fears and concerns, reduce unnecessary delays, and make explicit the responsibilities of donors in their assessment process.
为了保障自愿性并将对活体肾捐献者的伤害降到最低,需要进行全面评估。这个过程冗长、侵入性强且情绪挑战性大,多达五分之一的潜在捐献者选择退出。我们旨在描述捐献者对评估过程的体验。
设计、地点、参与者和测量:我们进行了 14 个焦点小组,涉及来自三个移植中心(澳大利亚和加拿大)的 123 名完成捐献的肾脏捐献者。对转录本进行了主题分析。
我们确定了反映捐献者评估体验的六个主题。与坚持有关的主题包括情感投入(优先考虑受赠者的健康、对正常生活的渴望、保护资格、对让他人失望的羞耻感和克服反对意见)、不受低风险影响(对医疗的信心和保护、值得冒险、内在的不可战胜和风险正常化)以及心理准备(避免后悔、解决决策上的犹豫不决、管理对恢复的期望)。挑战包括对健康的潜在恐惧(处理令人担忧的信息、不安的不确定性和术前恐慌)、系统缺陷(在推动过程中自我倡导、压力紧迫、安全框架不一致、令人不安的身体检查、质疑风险信息和耗费资金)以及生活方式干扰(生活在困境中、繁重的生活方式中断和重视灵活性)。
以前的捐献者描述了他们对捐赠的情感投入和保护自己资格的决心,尽管他们对自己的健康、财务和生活方式中断以及来自家庭或社区的反对感到担忧。我们的研究结果表明,需要为手术和康复做好准备,减轻焦虑和生活负担,确保捐献者感到舒适地表达他们的恐惧和担忧,减少不必要的延误,并明确捐献者在评估过程中的责任。