Becker Fabian, Roberts Keith J, Nadal Miriam de, Zink Michael, Stiegler Philipp, Pemberger Sonja, Castellana Teresa Pont, Kellner Christian, Murphy Nick, Kaltenborn Alexander, Tuffs Annette, Amelung Volker, Krauth Christian, Bayliss Janice, Schrem Harald H
Department of Epidemiology, Social Medicine and Health Systems Research, Hannover Medical School, Hannover, Germany.
Management Team of the Transplant Center, Hannover Medical School, Hannover, Germany.
Ann Transplant. 2020 Mar 17;25:e921727. doi: 10.12659/AOT.921727.
BACKGROUND Organ donation-rates using deceased donors and organizational approaches to organ donation differ drastically between countries at a similar level of health care as measured by the Euro Health Consumer Index (EHCI). MATERIAL AND METHODS Expert opinions from intensive care nurses, physicians, transplant coordinators and transplant surgeons from Austria, Germany, Spain, and the U.K. were obtained in semi-structured interviews followed by qualitative content analysis. Results were reported back to all interview partners to identify potential controversies and consensus recommendations. RESULTS No controversies could be detected. On a variety of beneficial factors an interprofessional consensus between interview partners could be reached: A) The relevance of standardization of the screening for potential donors, the family approach and training; B) standards and best-practice procedures should be regulated and supervised by state authorities; C) full transparency and the prevention of scandals is essential; D) overburdened intensive care unit (ICU) doctors need to be supported by full-time in-house special nurses who organize donor evaluation, transport logistics and pastoral care, if required; E) public awareness campaigns are helpful; F) a broad public consensus on the concept of donation after brain and cardiac death is essential; G) incentives for the reporting of potential organ donors are inappropriate; H) an opt-out system alone is not sufficient. CONCLUSIONS Expert opinions from different professional backgrounds from different European health care systems reach a broad consensus on the most relevant issues for the improvement of organ donation.
背景 以欧洲卫生消费者指数(EHCI)衡量,在医疗保健水平相近的国家之间,使用已故捐赠者的器官捐赠率以及器官捐赠的组织方式存在巨大差异。
材料与方法 通过半结构化访谈获取了来自奥地利、德国、西班牙和英国的重症监护护士、医生、移植协调员和移植外科医生的专家意见,随后进行定性内容分析。将结果反馈给所有访谈对象,以确定潜在的争议和共识性建议。
结果 未发现争议。在各种有益因素方面,访谈对象之间达成了跨专业共识:A)对潜在捐赠者筛查、家属沟通方式和培训进行标准化的相关性;B)标准和最佳实践程序应由国家当局进行规范和监督;C)完全透明和防止丑闻至关重要;D)负担过重的重症监护病房(ICU)医生需要得到全职内部专科护士的支持,这些护士负责组织捐赠者评估、运输后勤和必要时的临终关怀;E)公众意识宣传活动是有帮助的;F)就脑死亡和心死亡后的捐赠概念达成广泛的公众共识至关重要;G)对报告潜在器官捐赠者给予激励是不合适的;H)仅靠退出系统是不够的。
结论 来自不同欧洲医疗保健系统、不同专业背景的专家意见在改善器官捐赠的最相关问题上达成了广泛共识。