| Literature DB >> 25057260 |
Jack de Groot1, Myrra Vernooij-Dassen2, Anneke de Vries3, Cornelia Hoedemaekers4, Andries Hoitsma5, Wim Smeets6, Evert van Leeuwen7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Effectiveness of the donation request is generally measured by consent rates, rather than by relatives' satisfaction with their decision. Our aim was to elicit Dutch ICU staffs' views and experiences with the donation request, to investigate their awareness of (dis)satisfaction with donation decisions by relatives, specifically in the case of refusal, and to collect advice that may leave more relatives satisfied with their decision.Entities:
Keywords: Donation request; Health care professionals; Organ donation; Qualitative research; Regret
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25057260 PMCID: PMC4107587 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2253-14-52
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Anesthesiol ISSN: 1471-2253 Impact factor: 2.217
Characteristics of participants
| 32 | 100 | |
| | | |
| | 16 | 50 |
| | 16 | 50 |
| | | |
| | 12 | 37 |
| | 15 | 47 |
| | 5 | 16 |
| | | |
| | 11 | 34 |
| | 13 | 41 |
| | 8 | 25 |
| 43.4 | 100 | |
| | | |
| | 20.1 | 37 |
| | 18.2 | 47 |
| | 25.0 | 16 |
| 20.0 | 100 | |
| | | |
| | 12.0 | 37 |
| | 10.0 | 47 |
| | 8.0 | 16 |
| 10.5 | 100 |
Code book
| Decision | 1. Communication with ICU staff and among relatives about the decision and afterwards, | |
| 2. Patient’s wish (not) known from earlier communication or donation register, | ||
| 3. Agreement between relatives about the decision, | ||
| 4. Organ donation by children | ||
| Evaluation | 5. Values of patient, respect for autonomy of patient, | |
| 6. Values of relatives, | ||
| 7. Influence of religion on the decision, | ||
| 8. Regret about decision, | ||
| 9. How do relatives feel about the donation request, | ||
| 10. Objectives by relatives against donation | ||
| Support | 11. Enough time to decide, | |
| 12. Enough understandable information to make a decision, | ||
| 13. What is good care for the patient and the relatives to make a decision, | ||
| 14. Which kind of support can relatives help to make the right decision, | ||
| 15. Which person (counsellor) can guide relatives to the right decision | ||
| Requestor | 16. Requestor: who is requestor, who assists in the request, relational aspects between relatives and requestor, | |
| 17. Task of the requestor, information required about the donation procedure and about brain death to bring relatives to a decision, | ||
| 18. Skills required for the requestor, use of information (about patient’s wish or ideas of relatives) gathered by nurses, use of information from the donation register | ||
| 19. Attitude required for the requestor | ||
| Context of the request | 20. Where, when, timing, initiative of relatives before the request, acuteness of the situation, | |
| 21. Decoupling | ||
| Interest | 22. Interest of relatives, interest of potential donor, interest of patients on waiting list – as theme in the donation request | |
| Brain death | 23. Brain death (understanding by ICU staff, by relatives), difficulties in care for a brain dead patient, determination of brain death, apneu test | |
| Feeling comfortable with donation request | 24. How do ICU staff feel about the donation request, if they are requestor, if they facilitate the request | |
| Personal ideas about organ donation | 25. Personal ideas of ICU staff about organ donation, registration, donation law; change in ideas as a consequence of experiences with donation procedures | |
| Care after death for relatives | 26. Offering relatives contact and care after leaving the hospital, request by relatives for aftercare | |
| Themes in aftercare contact | 27. Themes of aftercare conversation, review of the donation decision including regret | |
| Law and organ donation | 28. Donation law, Dutch system (opt-in) in contrast to Spain, Belgium (opt-out) | |
| donation register | 29. Donation register: how it works, preferences, motivation for registration, campaigns for registration, the importance of registration | |
| Organ donation as societal theme | 30. Organ donation in media, education, information campaigns, in societal groups (family, health care, school) |
Overarching themes
| MD m 52 | 1 | The decision | |
| | RN m 43 | 2 | I also notice that actually the question |
| | TC f 49 | 3 | No, the only regret that you hear occasionally is: |
| | MD m 57 | 4 | That is what you frequently hear from parents: |
| | TC f 47 | 5 | Whereas, and this is how I always explain it to our doctors and then I always say…, you should not give a point in time at all. Just say: |
| | TC f 47 | 6 | That is a bit of a slogan of mine, which also, indeed, means the right information at the right moment, which also means well-informed and well-balanced. Sometimes you have to repeat it all, because the information has not yet sunk in, which is of course understandable; these people are in an acute and stressful situation and are perhaps not able to fully take in all this information. |
| | MD m 52 | 7 | I think the most difficult thing is to find a balance, especially in an acute situation, between the care and the relatives’ grief and your own feeling of the best care you want to give this family. You need to gather all your emotions to make such a sudden death bearable for the relatives. At the same time and completely contrasting is the importance of the organ, needing to be preserved. That is for me the most difficult thing, because what you would rather do is concentrate on one thing, namely guiding the relatives in such a terrible period. That is difficult. |
| | TC f 47 | 8 | Something that I also find very important, which is also a bit like stating the obvious, that there is someone present who is capable of giving optimal guidance, also with respect to time. |
| MD m 52 | 9 | It makes a great difference whether they have had the opportunity to build up a bond of trust with the relatives, because that makes the conversation a much easier one. I immediately admit that if you are confronted with a family for whom this has suddenly happened, and you do not know them, I think it is still one of the most difficult conversations to have. | |
| | MD m 34 | 10 | What happens sometimes is that you go for the heart-beating procedure, but it takes too much time to complete the brain-death-protocol, which leads you to say: there is a second option, let us stop this now. In other words you stop the treatment, not for the patient himself, but to go for the non-heart-beating procedure. |
| | MD m 58 | 11 | I think it would be a good thing to train people’s communication skills. That would do a great deal of good. I have had to make my own way in this, and I do feel that I have succeeded, but I also think that this is difficult for younger colleagues. |
| | TC m 50 | 12 | These are funny things you hear afterwards: |
| | TC f 49 | 13 | You should not victimise the people who are left behind. We tend to exaggerate sometimes, the donation request is terribly difficult and if you say ‘yes’ or ‘no’, it is so hard….. Mourning is normal, losing someone and mourning their loss is normal, I think. You can cause damage with a donation request, if you do it in a tactless way or the request is rather wrongly timed, in so far as you can time such a thing, but that is what I think. |
| | MD f 42 | 14 | If the family says ‘no’, while the patient has consented, that is an extraordinarily inconvenient situation, especially because the family is very vulnerable and for that reason I would not dare to put more pressure on them. |
| | TC m 50 | 15 | I am a transplant coordinator, although I feel that I am a donation coordinator. I am there for the relatives, for the donor, and for the ICU staff too. I am there to assist all of these people in their weighty task by guiding them through this procedure. That is my intention, yes. Obviously I sympathise very much with all of the people who are on the waiting list for organ transplantation, and I hope that they will receive an organ of good quality. |
| | TC f 47 | 16 | I always say…try to find out why they cannot accept the patient’s will. Sometimes it can be just a tiny thing, often fear, which is not to say that that is a small thing but it can be something that can be solved… through proper counselling. Or sometimes it is something else…, |
| | MD m 33 | 17 | You tend to give priority to the emotions of the relatives rather than to the will of the patient….. |
| MD m 57 | | You are afraid of having a difficult conversation, you are the doctor, right? Because then you feel you have to act like some sort of body snatcher, trying to coax the organs out of the body. | |
| | RN f 32 | 18 | I had been registered from the age of eighteen. But since I learned about the length of the procedure, I would rather let my family decide about it, because I think it will create a heavy burden for them. |
| RN f 41 | 19 | If you ask them whether they feel regret, what would people have wanted otherwise, well, that bit you do not know about. | |
| | MD m 50 | 20 | You often know whether a request was made, but that is it. If it is ‘yes’, they always get a message from the transplant coordinator and often a meeting, and if it is ‘no’ then it is no and we do not follow up on it. |
| | TC f 47 | 21 | But if you said ‘no’, and you have a meeting afterwards with your doctor, especially if you regret your decision, that makes it even harder to talk about the subject. |
| MD f 37 | 22 | Now at least we know that this is not actually working very well. Our system…. | |
| MD m 52 | In Belgium the system is such that you really need to think about it. Because you have to come to a decision and that decision will be carried out. | ||
| | MD m 58 | 23 | I am there for the patient. So my point is….. the patient has in fact signed a testament, that’s how I communicate it to the relatives. |
| RN f 34 | 24 | I once had a conversation with relatives who said |