Zemouri Charifa, Nait Kassi Assia, Sinselmeijer Muriel, Elbertse Bert, Mulder Yvonne, Jobse Sara, Merz Eva-Maria
Zemouri et al., Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
MentalEdGroup, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates.
PLoS One. 2025 Aug 1;20(8):e0328212. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0328212. eCollection 2025.
The Moroccan-Dutch population is underrepresented in Dutch donor pools, threatening access to matched blood products and transplants. This study explored Moroccan-Dutch individuals willingness to donate blood, stem cell, and live organ donation, and preferred information dissemination methods.
A qualitative and exploratory ethnographic study was employed using a survey followed by a focus group to examine willingness and information needs regarding living donation (blood, stem cells, kidney, liver) among Moroccan-Dutch individuals aged 18-55. Survey results were thematically analysed to inform an interview guide for in-depth focus group. Eight participants (four male, four female) were purposefully invited. The session was recorded, transcribed, and analysed thematically.
Surveys from 119 persons and one focus group were analysed. Ten themes emerged across tissue types: 1) awareness of need; 2) information and knowledge; 3) donation process; 4) cues to action; 5) attitude; 6) religious legitimacy; 7) health challenges; 8) fear; 9) social cohesion and solidarity; 10) relationship with recipient. Participants were willing to donate blood, but needed reminders to prompt registration. Hesitation around stem cell donation stemmed from unfamiliarity and Islamic uncertainty. For living organ donation, emotional ties to recipients influenced willingness. Most participants were unaware of ethnic matching needs and shortages, and preferred campaigns highlighting these aspects. A multi-component communication strategy was preferred, combining medical, technical, religious, and emotional information, including patient stories, to address gaps and insecurities.
Participants were unfamiliar with stem cell donation, living organ donation, and ethnic matching. They were willing to donate tissue if aware of the shortage, the need for ethnic matching, and religious legitimacy They sought medical-technical information from donor organisations but preferred religious legitimacy communicated by an Islamic scholar. Participants stressed the need for a tailored campaign addressing barriers, ethnic matching, and reliance on the same community for successful living donation.
摩洛哥裔荷兰人在荷兰的献血者群体中所占比例较低,这对获得匹配的血液制品和移植器官构成了威胁。本研究探讨了摩洛哥裔荷兰人献血、捐献干细胞和活体器官捐赠的意愿,以及他们偏好的信息传播方式。
采用定性和探索性的人种学研究方法,先进行一项调查,随后开展一个焦点小组讨论,以调查18至55岁的摩洛哥裔荷兰人对活体捐赠(血液、干细胞、肾脏、肝脏)的意愿和信息需求。对调查结果进行主题分析,为深入的焦点小组讨论制定访谈指南。有目的地邀请了八名参与者(四名男性,四名女性)。会议进行了录音、转录,并进行了主题分析。
对119人的调查和一个焦点小组的讨论进行了分析。在不同组织类型中出现了十个主题:1)对需求的认识;2)信息和知识;3)捐赠过程;4)行动提示;5)态度;6)宗教合法性;7)健康挑战;8)恐惧;9)社会凝聚力和团结;10)与接受者的关系。参与者愿意献血,但需要提醒以促使他们进行登记。对干细胞捐赠的犹豫源于不熟悉和伊斯兰教义方面的不确定性。对于活体器官捐赠,与接受者的情感联系影响了意愿。大多数参与者不知道种族匹配的需求和短缺情况,他们更喜欢突出这些方面的宣传活动。人们更喜欢一种多成分的沟通策略,将医学、技术、宗教和情感信息结合起来,包括患者故事,以弥补差距和消除不安全感。
参与者对干细胞捐赠、活体器官捐赠和种族匹配不熟悉。如果他们意识到短缺情况、种族匹配的必要性以及宗教合法性,他们愿意捐赠组织。他们从捐赠组织寻求医学技术信息,但更喜欢由伊斯兰学者传达宗教合法性。参与者强调需要开展一场量身定制的宣传活动,以解决障碍、种族匹配问题,并依靠同一社区来实现成功的活体捐赠。