Impact of cadaveric organ donation on Taiwanese donor families during the first 6 months after donation

Citation
Fj. Shih et al., Impact of cadaveric organ donation on Taiwanese donor families during the first 6 months after donation, PSYCHOS MED, 63(1), 2001, pp. 69-78
Citations number
61
Categorie Soggetti
Psychiatry,"Clinical Psycology & Psychiatry","Neurosciences & Behavoir
Journal title
PSYCHOSOMATIC MEDICINE
ISSN journal
00333174 → ACNP
Volume
63
Issue
1
Year of publication
2001
Pages
69 - 78
Database
ISI
SICI code
0033-3174(200101/02)63:1<69:IOCODO>2.0.ZU;2-#
Abstract
Objective: Organ donation is a complex decision for family members of Asian donors. The impact of cadaveric organ donation on both Chinese and Western donor families has not been well investigated within a cultural framework. The purposes of this study were to follow Chinese family members' appraisa l of their decision to donate organs, to explore the possible negative and positive impacts of organ donation on their family life, and to determine w hat help they expected from healthcare providers during the first 6 months after donation. Methods: Twenty-two family members (10 men and 12 women) of cadaveric organ donors who signed consent forms at an organ transplant med ical center in Taiwan participated in this project and completed in-depth i nterviews during the sixth month after donation. Results: Participants were 25 to 56 years old (mean = 48.15 +/- 8.31 years). The type of kinship of t he participants included the donor's parents, older sister, and spouse. Sub jects reported several negative impacts: worry about the donor's afterlife (86%), stress due to controversy among family members over the decision to donate (77%), and stress due to others' devaluation of the donation (45%). Positive impacts reported by the subjects included having a sense of reward for helping others (36%), having an increased appreciation of life (32%), having closer family relationships (23%), and planning to shift life goals to the study of medicine (9%). Subjects expected the transplant team to pro vide information about organ recipients (73%), to submit the necessary docu ments so that family members could receive healthcare payments from the ins urance company (68%), to help resolve legal proceedings and settlements ass ociated with accidents (64%), and to not overly publicize their decision to donate (64%). Conclusions: Although all of the subjects reported that orga n donation was the right decision, the decision to donate did not protect T aiwanese donor families from negative psychocognitive bereavement. The impa cts of organ donation were affected by the subject's social cultural, spiri tual, and legal context and the nature of their bereavement.