The importance of need‐altruism and kin‐altruism to blood donor behaviour for black and white people

Author:

Ferguson Eamonn12ORCID,Dawe‐Lane Erin1ORCID,Ajayi Oluwafemi3ORCID,Osikomaiya Bodunrin4ORCID,Mills Richard12ORCID,Okubanjo Abiola5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychology University of Nottingham Nottinghamshire UK

2. National Institute for Health and Care Research Blood and Transplant Research Unit in Donor Health and Behaviour, Department of Public Health and Primary Care University of Cambridge Cambridge UK

3. Blood Sciences Dorset County Hospital NHS Foundation Trust Dorchester UK

4. Lagos State Blood Transfusion Service, Gbagada Centre General Hospital Lagos Nigeria

5. Action on Blood London UK

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundNeed‐altruism (a preference to help people in need) and kin‐altruism (a preference to help kin over non‐kin) underlie two hypotheses for voluntary blood donation: (i) Need‐altruism underlies motivations for volunteer blood donation and (ii) Black people express a stronger preference for kin‐altruism, which is a potential barrier to donation. This paper tests these hypotheses and explores how need‐ and kin‐altruism are associated with wider altruistic motivations, barriers, and strategies to encourage donation.MethodsWe assessed need‐ and kin‐altruism, other mechanisms‐of‐altruism (e.g., reluctant‐altruism), barriers, strategies to encourage donation, donor status, and willingness‐to‐donate across four groups based on ethnicity (Black; White), nationality (British; Nigerian), and country‐of‐residence: (i) Black‐British people (n = 395), and Black‐Nigerian people (ii) in the UK (n = 97) or (iii) across the rest of the world (n = 101), and (v) White‐British people in the UK (n = 452). We also sampled a Black‐Nigerian Expert group (n = 60).ResultsNeed‐altruism was higher in donors and associated with willingness‐to‐donate in non‐donors. Levels of kin‐altruism did not differ between Black and White people, but need‐altruism was lower in Black‐British people. Kin‐altruism was associated with a preference for incentives, and need‐altruism with a preference for recognition (e.g., a thank you) as well as an increased willingness‐to‐donate for Black non‐donors. Need‐altruism underlies a blood‐donor‐cooperative‐phenotype.ConclusionNeed‐altruism is central to blood donation, in particular recruitment. Lower need‐altruism may be a specific barrier for Black‐British people. Kin‐altruism is important for Black non‐donors. The blood donor cooperative phenotype deserves further consideration. Implications for blood services are discussed.

Publisher

Wiley

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