| Literature DB >> 34657839 |
André Gustavo Fernandes de Oliveira1, Augusto Ferreira Gonçalves1, Júlia Nunes Soares1, Letícia Henriques Neto Salgado1, Bruno Silveira Santana1, Matheus Venâncio Passos1, Juliana Lopes de Oliveira Reis1, Gustavo Candiá Arantes1, Luís Filipe Sarmento Campos1, Matheus Souza Carvalho1, Lucas Cotrim Furtado da Gama1, Alice Belleigoli Rezende1,2.
Abstract
Dissection and human specimens study remain the gold standard method for teaching anatomy. Due to the increasing health science courses in Brazil, the traditional way of obtaining bodies for scientific purposes, the unclaimed ones, became insufficient. In addition, this source is no longer ethically appropriate according to anatomists. In order to maintain the teaching quality, the Federal University of Juiz de Fora (UFJF) in Brazil, inspired by successful initiatives around the world, created a body donation program; Sempre Vivo. Besides the bureaucratic difficulty faced during its regulation, the implementation of a body donation program requires special attention regarding the religiosity, culture and uniqueness of the city's inhabitants. Informing people can demystify the process, avoid prejudice and increase the number of donors. In this way, an outreach project was designed to publicize Sempre Vivo and raise public awareness. In the first six years, Sempre Vivo reached the mark of 64 registered donors and seven bodies received. The donor's profile corresponds to female (70.3%), 57 years of age, retired (50.8%), spiritist (53.1%) and with 12 years or more of formal education (90.6%). Considering that the UFJF has not received unclaimed bodies for ten years, the program was considered satisfactory up to this level and, in the future, it may be the exclusive source of anatomical specimens. The description of the creation and the publicizing of Sempre Vivo, the overcome challenges, as well as the donors' profile, may encourage and facilitate the foundation of similar programs in Brazil and abroad.Entities:
Keywords: Anatomy; Body donation; Donors; Health education
Year: 2021 PMID: 34657839 PMCID: PMC8693134 DOI: 10.5115/acb.21.096
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anat Cell Biol ISSN: 2093-3665
Fig. 1Sempre Vivo information leaflet. (A) Cover: logo capturing the concept of donation associated with a publicity slogan: “Give life to knowledge, donate your body to study” and how to get in touch with the Department of Anatomy. (B) Inside: information about body donation.
Fig. 2Flowchart of Sempre Vivo since the donor’s access to the program going through the registration procedures until receiving the body.
Fig. 3Sempre Vivo donors profile, regarding (A) how the donor came to know the program; (B) educational level; (C) religious beliefs and faith.
Sempre Vivo donor profile per year
| Donor profile | Operating year | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | |
| Age (yr) | 57.5±13.0 | 50.8±12.5 | 55.6±17.4 | 51.8±7.8 | 66.4±11.4 | 58.4±13.9 |
| Sex (male/female) | 35.7/64.3 | 7.7/92.3 | 40.0/60.0 | 20.0/80.0 | 62.5/37.5 | 11.1/88.9 |
| Program information | 23.1 (website) | 30.8 (website) | 33.3 (media) | 80.0 (another donor) | 25.0 (another donor) | 44.4 (another donor) |
| Formal education | 92.3 (>12 years) | 92.3 (>12 years) | 93.3 (>12 years) | 100 (>12 years) | 87.5 (>12 years) | 77.8 (>12 years) |
| Current job situation | 58.3 (retired) | 66.7 (active) | 60.0 (retired) | 40.0 (retired) | 50.0 (retired) | 55.6 (retired) |
| Income per month | 46.2 (≤US $600.00) | 30.8 (≤US $600.00) | 46.7 (≤US $600.00) | 40.0 (≤US $600.00) | 50.0 (≤US $600.00) | 33.3 (≤US $600.00) |
| Religious beliefs/faith | 38.5 (Spiritist) | 61.5 (Spiritist) | 46.7 (Spiritist) | 80.0 (Spiritist) | 50.0 (Spiritist) | 55.6 (Spiritist) |
Values are presented as mean±SD or %. *Most prevalent feature.
Summary of the body donation programs discussed above, highlighting the year of foundation and the number of registered donors per year
| University (country) | Foundation of the bequest program | Donor registers (yr) |
|---|---|---|
| University of Otago (New Zealand) | 1943 | >140 |
| Yonsei University College of Medicine (Korea) | 1992 | >128 |
| University of Silesia (Poland) | 2003 | >113 |
| University of Bologna (Italy) | 2013 | >61 |
| Federal University of Health Sciences of Porto Alegre (Brazil) | 2008 | >29 |
| Federal University of Juiz de Fora (Brazil) | 2014 | >10 |