Wellesley A, Glucksman E, Crouch R
Accident and Emergency Department, King's College Hospital, London.
J Accid Emerg Med. 1997 Jan;14(1):24-5. doi: 10.1136/emj.14.1.24.
To determine whether recently bereaved people would object to being asked about organ donation immediately after the death of their relative.
A telephone interview of 78 recently bereaved relatives of people who had died in an inner city accident and emergency (A&E) department; 68 (87%) agreed to participate in the study and were sent a questionnaire. Outcome measures were views on being asked about organ donation in the A&E department immediately after the death of a relative and knowledge of the possibility for organ donation in A&E after a sudden death.
37 questionnaires were returned: 27 (72.9%) of those who responded would not have minded being asked, five would have minded, and five did not know or did not fill in the questionnaire; 29 were aware that organs could be donated following a death in A&E. Only six people had discussed organ donation before the bereavement. Only two of the people who died and seven of their relatives carried a donor card. Sixteen had heard about the NHS donor register.
Most those responding would not have minded being asked about organ donation following a sudden death. More education is needed in two main areas: (1) to raise public awareness about the shortage of donor organs; (2) to improve the medical and nursing confidence in discussing these difficult issues sensitively but more openly and frequently.
确定近期失去亲人的人是否会反对在其亲属去世后立即被询问器官捐赠事宜。
对78名在内城区事故与急救(A&E)部门去世者的近期失去亲人的亲属进行电话访谈;68人(87%)同意参与研究并收到一份问卷。结果指标包括对在亲属去世后立即在A&E部门被询问器官捐赠的看法,以及对猝死情况下A&E部门进行器官捐赠可能性的了解。
37份问卷被收回:27名(72.9%)回复者不介意被询问,5人介意,5人不知道或未填写问卷;29人知道在A&E部门有人去世后器官可以被捐赠。只有6人在亲人去世前讨论过器官捐赠。去世的人中只有2人以及他们的7名亲属持有捐赠卡。16人听说过国民保健制度(NHS)捐赠登记册。
大多数回复者不介意在猝死之后被询问器官捐赠事宜。在两个主要方面需要更多教育:(1)提高公众对捐赠器官短缺的认识;(2)提高医护人员在敏感但更公开和频繁地讨论这些难题时的信心。