Litcius/Paper detail

Beliefs and Intention to Organ Donation: A Household Survey.

Ayman El‐Menyar, Hassan Al‐Thani, Tulika Mehta, Betsy Varughese, Yousuf Al-Maslamani, Ahammed Mekkodathil, Rajvir Singh

2020PubMed18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Organ transplantation is considered as the last therapeutic option for the treatment for end-stage organ failure. However, the gap between the demand and supply of transplantable organs is still wide. Extensive researches have been conducted to understand this gap, and many countries have introduced Opt-out laws and have started targeted awareness programs. We aimed to assess, among the household residents, the normative behavior and beliefs and its correlation to intentions toward becoming organ donors. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: A household survey with the resident population of Qatar was conducted from October 2016 to November 2016. A sample of 1044 individuals aged 18 and above, residing in eight municipalities within the country, was selected using a two-stage systematic random sampling method to understand the relationship between organ donation intentions and behavioral, normative, and control beliefs. Independent female enumerators collected data on electronic tablets and exported to SPSS for data analysis. RESULTS: = 0.02) were negatively associated to organ donation intention. CONCLUSIONS: Findings indicate that behavioral and normative beliefs play a very important role in contributing to the intention of the individual toward organ donation.

Topics & Concepts

Organ donationNormativeDonationTheory of planned behaviorPsychologyPopulationSocial psychologyMultivariate analysisNormative social influenceSample (material)Family medicineTransplantationMedicineDemographyControl (management)Environmental healthLawInternal medicineSociologyPolitical scienceEconomicsManagementChemistryChromatographyOrgan Donation and TransplantationRenal Transplantation Outcomes and TreatmentsBlood donation and transfusion practices