Oczkowski Simon J W, Durepos Pamela, Centofanti John, Arsenau Erika, Dhanani Sonny, Cook Deborah J, Meade Maureen O
1 Division of Critical Care, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
2 Hamilton Health Sciences, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
Prog Transplant. 2019 Jun;29(2):179-184. doi: 10.1177/1526924819835826. Epub 2019 Mar 21.
Rates of successful organ donation vary between otherwise comparable intensive care units (ICUs). The ICU staff have a unique perspective into the facilitators and barriers underlying this variation in successful deceased organ donation.
What do ICU staff perceive to be the most meaningful facilitators and barriers to deceased organ donation?
We designed and conducted a survey of all disciplines working in the ICU to ascertain the perceived facilitators and barriers to donation in an academic tertiary care hospital. Survey reliability was assessed using Cronbach α. Factor analysis was used to assess construct validity and identify potentially redundant survey items.
We had responses from 108 ICU staff, including nurses (n = 75), respiratory therapists (n = 14), physicians (n = 12), chaplains (n = 2), as well as social work, pharmacy, physiotherapy, and occupational therapy (n = 1 each). Perceived facilitators included availability of organ donation organization coordinators, explicit institutional support for donation, ICU staff culture toward donation, standardized order sets for donation, presence of ICU staff with donation experience, and bedside nurse presence at discussions about donation. Perceived barriers included ICU staff ruling out potentially suitable donors before consulting a donor coordinator, physician communication skills, low priority for organ donation among operating room staff, limited family understanding of patient prognosis and organ donation, and limited emotional readiness of families to discuss donation.
Several staff-perceived facilitators and barriers to deceased organ donation were identified in the ICU. Future research could identify strategies to promote these facilitators and overcome barriers.
在其他方面相当的重症监护病房(ICU)中,成功器官捐赠的比例存在差异。ICU工作人员对导致这种成功的已故器官捐赠差异的促进因素和障碍有着独特的见解。
ICU工作人员认为已故器官捐赠最有意义的促进因素和障碍是什么?
我们设计并开展了一项针对ICU所有工作学科的调查,以确定一所学术性三级护理医院中对捐赠的感知促进因素和障碍。使用Cronbach α评估调查的可靠性。采用因子分析来评估结构效度并识别可能冗余的调查项目。
我们收到了108名ICU工作人员的回复,包括护士(n = 75)、呼吸治疗师(n = 14)、医生(n = 12)、牧师(n = 2),以及社会工作、药学、物理治疗和职业治疗(各n = 1)。感知到的促进因素包括器官捐赠组织协调员的可获得性、机构对捐赠的明确支持、ICU工作人员对捐赠的文化态度、捐赠的标准化医嘱集、有捐赠经验的ICU工作人员的存在,以及床边护士参与捐赠讨论。感知到的障碍包括ICU工作人员在咨询捐赠协调员之前排除潜在合适的捐赠者、医生的沟通技巧、手术室工作人员对器官捐赠的低优先级、家属对患者预后和器官捐赠的了解有限,以及家属在讨论捐赠时的情感准备不足。
在ICU中确定了几个工作人员感知到的已故器官捐赠的促进因素和障碍。未来的研究可以确定促进这些促进因素和克服障碍的策略。