4.6 Article

Factors affecting acceptance of organ donation in mainland China: A national cross-sectional study

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NURSING
Volume 32, Issue 15-16, Pages 5219-5229

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jocn.16587

Keywords

cross-sectional study; influencing factors; organ donation; public acceptance

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This study examines the acceptance of organ donation and its influencing factors in mainland China. The findings suggest that gender, family, anxiety, pressure, social support, and health literacy are major factors affecting residents' attitudes towards organ donation.
Aims and ObjectivesTo explore the acceptances and associated influences of organ donation in mainland China. BackgroundThe shortage of organ donors has limited the development of organ transplantation in China. It is important to recognise the target population who has high intention to donate their organs may change the status. DesignWe conducted a cross-sectional, multi-stage sampling study collected demographic data and individuals' willingness to accept organ donation. MethodsA stepwise linear regression analysis was adopted to evaluate the factors related to the attitudes toward organ donation. ResultsWe collected 11,031 valid samples for the survey. The willingness to donate organs among Chinese residents averaged 56.93 points. To be specific, males (beta = -.03), religious believers (beta = -.01) and parents with a different number of children (all: beta = -.04) are less willing to donate their organs. Respondents who live in an urban area (beta = .03), have higher education level (High school or junior college beta = .04, Bachelor degree or above beta = .09), feel anxious (mild, moderate beta = .02), feel pressured (moderate, severe beta = .08), have higher scores of the Short-Form Health Literacy Instrument (HLS-SF12) (beta = .31), The Self-Management Scale (SHMS) (beta = .16), EuroQol Five Dimensions Questionnaire (EQ-5D) (beta = .04) and EuroQol Visual Analogue Scale (EQ-VAS) (beta = .24), are more positive to donate. ConclusionsThis study firstly discusses the public acceptance of organ donation through a nationwide sample around China. In this study, we discovered that Chinese residents' acceptance level of organ donation and that gender, house, anxiety, pressure, social support and health literacy were the main influencing factors on residents' attitudes. Relevance to Clinical PracticeTo figure out the Chinese public acceptance and its influencing factors of organ donation can help nurse transplant coordinators to recognise the target population and the obstacles of organ donation. Patient or Public ContributionAt the phase of collecting data, participants were recruited to fill the questionnaires.

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