Gortmaker S L, Beasley C L, Brigham L E, Franz H G, Garrison R N, Lucas B A, Patterson R H, Sobol A M, Grenvik N A, Evanisko M J
Department of Health and Social Behavior, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
Crit Care Med. 1996 Mar;24(3):432-9. doi: 10.1097/00003246-199603000-00012.
To estimate the potential for solid organ donation; to identify modifiable reasons for nondonation.
Retrospective medical records review.
Sixty-nine acute care hospitals in four geographic areas of the United States in 1990, and a stratified random sample of 89 hospitals in three of the same areas and 33 of the same hospitals in 1993.
PATIENTS < or = 70 yrs of age who were brain dead and medically suitable for donation.
None.
Standard forms were used to record patient demographic and hospital information. Reasons for nondonation were coded as "not identified," "family not asked," "consent denied," or "other." The main outcome measures were rate of donation and rates of nonidentification, not asking, and nonconsent. Organ donation occurred among 33% (299/916) of medically suitable cases identified in 1990 (95% confidence interval 30% to 36%). Ninety-four potential donors were not identified, 156 were not asked, 326 families denied consent, and 41 potential donors were categorized as "other," including patients who had suffered a cardiac arrest, and medical examiner prohibition of donation. In the 1993 study, organ donation occurred in an estimated 33% of suitable cases. In 1990, rates of donation were highest among patients <50 yrs of age, patients who died of traumatic causes, and non-Hispanic white patients. Logistic regression showed lower odds of donation for African American patients (odds ratio 0.38, 95% confidence interval 0.23 to 0.63) independent of potentially confounding hospital and patient variables (p=.0001). Donation rates did not vary by hospital size or type.
Despite legal and policy initiatives, only one third of potential donors became donors in 1990, with similar results in 1993. Extrapolating the 1990 findings to the United States suggests a pool of 13,700 medically suitable donors per year. Prospective identification and requesting donation in all suitable potential donor cases could lead to 1,800 additional donors per year.
评估实体器官捐赠的可能性;确定导致不捐赠的可改变因素。
回顾性病历审查。
1990年美国四个地理区域的69家急症医院,以及1993年来自相同三个区域的89家医院的分层随机样本和33家相同医院。
年龄≤70岁、脑死亡且医学上适合捐赠的患者。
无。
使用标准表格记录患者人口统计学信息和医院信息。不捐赠的原因被编码为“未识别”“未询问家属”“拒绝同意”或“其他”。主要结局指标为捐赠率以及未识别、未询问和不同意的发生率。1990年确定的医学上适合捐赠的病例中,33%(299/916)进行了器官捐赠(95%置信区间为30%至36%)。94名潜在捐赠者未被识别,156名未被询问,326名家属拒绝同意,41名潜在捐赠者被归类为“其他”,包括心脏骤停患者以及法医禁止捐赠的情况。在1993年的研究中,估计33%的合适病例进行了器官捐赠。1990年,50岁以下患者、因创伤原因死亡的患者以及非西班牙裔白人患者的捐赠率最高。逻辑回归显示,非裔美国患者捐赠的几率较低(优势比0.38,95%置信区间0.23至0.63),与潜在的混杂医院和患者变量无关(p = 0.0001)。捐赠率不因医院规模或类型而异。
尽管有法律和政策举措,但1990年只有三分之一的潜在捐赠者成为捐赠者,1993年结果类似。将1990年的研究结果外推至美国,表明每年有13700名医学上适合捐赠的人。对所有合适的潜在捐赠者病例进行前瞻性识别并请求捐赠,每年可能会增加1800名捐赠者。