J Czerwiński1, T Danek2, M Trujnara3, A Parulski4, R Danielewicz5. 1. Department of Surgical and Transplant Nursing, Medical University of Warsaw, Warsaw, Poland; Polish Transplant Coordinating Center Poltransplant, Warsaw, Poland. Electronic address: jczerwinski@poltransplant.pl. 2. Polish Transplant Coordinating Center Poltransplant, Warsaw, Poland. 3. Department of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Therapy, Międzyleski Specialistic Hospital, Warsaw, Poland. 4. Department of Cardiosurgery, The Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński Institute of Cardiology, Warsaw, Poland. 5. Department of Surgical and Transplant Nursing, Medical University of Warsaw, Warsaw, Poland; Polish Transplant Coordinating Center Poltransplant, Warsaw, Poland.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: In 2010, the system of donor hospital transplant coordinators was implemented in 200 hospitals in Poland on the basis of contracts with Poltransplant. METHODS: This study evaluated whether the system (nationwide, maintained and funded by national organization) is sufficient, improved donation after brain death rates, and hospital activities. RESULTS: Donation indicators over a 21-month period of coordinators' work were compared with the 21-month period before their employment. The number of hospitals with a positive effect and with no effect was analyzed overall and in groups of hospitals with specific profiles. The implemented system resulted in increasing the number of potential donors by 27% (effectively, 24%); increasing utilized organs by 20% and multiorgan retrievals from 54% to 56%; decreasing the rate of utilized organs/actual donors from 2.65 to 2.57; and increasing family refusals from 8.5% to 9.3%. A positive effect was achieved in 102 hospitals (51%). Better results were achieved in regions where donation were initially low, namely, 59% in university hospitals, 63% in hospitals in large cities, 77% in hospitals with 2 coordinators, 67% in hospitals for adults, and 52% in hospitals where the coordinator was a doctor and not a nurse. This system resulted globally in increasing donation rates, but was effective only in one half of hospitals. CONCLUSIONS: Additional activities should be introduced to improve these results (quality systems, trainings, techniques for monitoring potential of donation, changes in profile of a coordinator). A formal analysis of coordinators' activities gives also the national organization a rational basis for their employment policy, taking into account the characteristics of hospitals and coordination teams.
INTRODUCTION: In 2010, the system of donor hospital transplant coordinators was implemented in 200 hospitals in Poland on the basis of contracts with Poltransplant. METHODS: This study evaluated whether the system (nationwide, maintained and funded by national organization) is sufficient, improved donation after brain death rates, and hospital activities. RESULTS: Donation indicators over a 21-month period of coordinators' work were compared with the 21-month period before their employment. The number of hospitals with a positive effect and with no effect was analyzed overall and in groups of hospitals with specific profiles. The implemented system resulted in increasing the number of potential donors by 27% (effectively, 24%); increasing utilized organs by 20% and multiorgan retrievals from 54% to 56%; decreasing the rate of utilized organs/actual donors from 2.65 to 2.57; and increasing family refusals from 8.5% to 9.3%. A positive effect was achieved in 102 hospitals (51%). Better results were achieved in regions where donation were initially low, namely, 59% in university hospitals, 63% in hospitals in large cities, 77% in hospitals with 2 coordinators, 67% in hospitals for adults, and 52% in hospitals where the coordinator was a doctor and not a nurse. This system resulted globally in increasing donation rates, but was effective only in one half of hospitals. CONCLUSIONS: Additional activities should be introduced to improve these results (quality systems, trainings, techniques for monitoring potential of donation, changes in profile of a coordinator). A formal analysis of coordinators' activities gives also the national organization a rational basis for their employment policy, taking into account the characteristics of hospitals and coordination teams.
Authors: Janet E Squires; Laura D Aloisio; Wilmer John Santos; Danielle Cho-Young; Monica Taljaard; Nills Gritters; Sonny Dhanani; Gregory Knoll Journal: Can J Kidney Health Dis Date: 2022-06-21