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- Title
Decision making around living and deceased donor kidney transplantation: a qualitative study exploring the importance of expected relationship changes.
- Authors
de Groot, Ingrid B; Schipper, Karen; van Dijk, Sandra; van der Boog, Paul J M; Stiggelbout, Anne M; Baranski, Andrzej G; Marang-van de Mheen, Perla J; PARTNER-study group
- Abstract
<bold>Background: </bold>Limited data exist on the impact of living kidney donation on the donor-recipient relationship. Purpose of this study was to explore motivations to donate or accept a (living donor) kidney, whether expected relationship changes influence decision making and whether relationship changes are actually experienced.<bold>Methods: </bold>We conducted 6 focus groups in 47 of 114 invited individuals (41%), asking retrospectively about motivations and decision making around transplantation. We used qualitative and quantitative methods to analyze the focus group transcripts.<bold>Results: </bold>Most deceased donor kidney recipients had a potential living donor available which they refused or did not want. They mostly waited for a deceased donor because of concern for the donor's health (75%). They more often expected negative relationship changes than living donor kidney recipients (75% vs. 27%, p = 0.01) who also expected positive changes. Living donor kidney recipients mostly accepted the kidney to improve their own quality of life (47%). Donors mostly donated a kidney because transplantation would make the recipient less dependent (25%). After transplantation both positive and negative relationship changes are experienced.<bold>Conclusion: </bold>Expected relationship changes and concerns about the donor's health lead some kidney patients to wait for a deceased donor, despite having a potential living donor available. Further research is needed to assess whether this concerns a selected group.
- Publication
BMC Nephrology, 2012, Vol 13, Issue 1, p103
- ISSN
1471-2369
- Publication type
journal article
- DOI
10.1186/1471-2369-13-103