Need for Organ Transplantations
Wait Times for Organ Donations
Public Knowledge on Disparities
Reactions After Donation
References
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Need for organ transplantation
Disparities in organ
donation and
receiving organ transplants among minorities have two sides. Many
minorities disproportionately
suffer from illness that may require
organ transplantation. Asian Americans have a slightly
increased
prevalence of End Stage Renal Disease (ERSD), which is increasing at a rate of
20% per year
compared with annual increase of 8-9% in the general
population.(1)There is a
higher prevalence
of end-stage renal disease, non-insulin dependent
diabetes mellitus,
hypertension, and higher chronic Hepatitis B carrier
rates among Asians and
Pacific Islanders than among whites and a higher
prevalence of hypertension and diabetes among African Americans than among
whites.
Asian Indians may also have an increased risk of ERSD.
(1) (For more
on this subject, go to Kidney Disease.) Thus, there is a disproportionately
great need for organ donations among minority
groups. |
Wait times for organ donations
The other side of this problem is the
disparity between
the
number of minority organ donors and the number of
minorities on the
organ waiting list.
The number of minorities on the
organ
transplant waiting list far exceeds
the number of
minority organ
donors.
Non-Caucasians are not donating
organs in proportion to
their
racial-group specific needs.(1) The
number of patients
per year on the kidney waiting list for
Asians was ten times
the number
of donors, and there was a
similar level of need among African Americans.
The number
of patients per year on
the
liver transplant waiting list for Asians
was more than
five times the number of
liver donors, a greater
disparity than for African Americans and Hispanics.
This has
had an effect on
the time a recipient
must wait before
receiving an organ. In 1999-2000, wait times for kidneys
for
Asians (1780days), African Americans (1784days), Hispanics
(1621days), Whites
(1256days), American Indians (1494days),
Pacific
Islanders (2350days), and non-Hispanics (1921days).(2) In
the U.S., socioeconomic
inequalities, including inadequate
medical
insurance, have long been considered
factors in
transplantation-related
racial disparities.(1)
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Public knowledge
Another factor that may lead to racial disparities in organ donation is lack of public awareness of the severity of the need. Weaver et al. found that older Asians (age 40 yrs or older) did not believe that Asians wait twice as long as whites for kidneys. While younger Asians (age 18 yrs. or younger) did not believe that Asians make up only 1% of all organ donations. Information about disparities may be the key messages of a public education campaign for Asians in the U.S.(3)
Feelings after donating organs..
A study by Shih et al. was
conducted to
find out the reaction of Asian families when deciding to donate the
organs of their family members. All
family
members in
the study felt that the decision to donate organs was
correct.
(4)
Forty-five percent of the subjects
experienced some positive
impact
from their decision to donate organs, such as
having a
sense of reward
for helping others as a result of the donation (36%),
having closer
family relationships (23%), having an increased
appreciation for
life
(32%), and planning to shift life goals
towards the study of medicine
(9%).(4) |
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References 1. Yoshida EM, Partovi N, Ross PL, Landsberg DN, Shapiro RJ, Chung SW.
Racial
differences between solid organ transplant donors and recipients
in British
Columbia: a five-year retrospective analysis.
Transplantation
1999;67(10):1324-9. 2. Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network. Kidney Kaplan-Meier Median
Wait Times for Registrations Listed 1997-2002. Based on OPTN Data as of July 29,
2005. http://www.optn.org/latestData/rptStrat.asp
3. Weaver M, Shiu-Thornton S, Spigner C, et al. Organ donation among Asians and Pacific Islanders: Preliminary Research Findings. J Health Poor Underserved 2002;14(2):182-193. 4. Shih FJ, Lai MK, Lin MH, et al. Impact of cadaveric organ donation on
Taiwanese
donor families during the first 6 months after donation.
Psychosom Med
2001;63(1):69-78. This research was supported by a National Library of Medicine (NLM)
Publication Grant #5G08 LM07653-02 in support of the creation of a web site
titled Factline: Tracking Health in Underserved Communities, www.factline.org.
Saqi S. Maleque, MSPH, Researcher, Principal Investigator: Virginia Brennan,
PhD.
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