Family refusal of eye tissue donation from potential solid organ donors: a retrospective analysis of summary and free-text data from the UK National Health Service Blood and Transplant Services (NHS-BT) National Referral Centre (1 April 2014 to 31 March 2017)

Author:

Bracher MikeORCID,Madi-Segwagwe Banyana C,Winstanley Emma,Gillan Helen,Long-Sutehall Tracy

Abstract

ObjectivesLong-standing undersupply of eye tissue exists both in the UK and globally, and the UK National Health Service Blood and Transplant Service (NHSBT) has called for further research exploring barriers to eye donation. This study aims to: (1) describe reported reasons for non-donation of eye tissue from solid organ donors in the UK between 1 April 2014 and 31 March 2017 and (2) discuss these findings with respect to existing theories relating to non-donation of eyes by family members.DesignSecondary analysis of a national primary data set of recorded reasons for non-donation of eyes from 2790 potential solid organ donors. Data analysis including descriptive statistics and qualitative content analysis of free-text data for 126 recorded cases of family decline of eye donation.SettingNational data set covering solid organ donation (secondary care).Participants2790 potential organ donors were assessed for eye donation eligibility between 1 April 2014 and 31 March 2017.ResultsReasons for non-retrieval of eyes were recorded as: family wishes (n=1339, 48% of total cases); medical reasons (n=841, 30%); deceased wishes (n=180, 7%). In >50% of recorded cases, reasons for non-donation were based on family’s knowledge of the deceased wishes, their perception of the deceased wishes and specific concerns regarding processes or effects of eye donation (for the deceased body). Findings are discussed with respect to the existing theoretical perspectives.ConclusionEye donation involves distinct psychological and sociocultural factors for families and HCPs that have not been fully explored in research or integrated into service design. We propose areas for future research and service development including potential of only retrieving corneal discs as opposed to full eyes to reduce disfigurement concerns; public education regarding donation processes; exploration of how request processes potentially influence acceptance of eye donation; procedures for assessment of familial responses to information provided during consent conversations.

Funder

NHS Blood and Transplant Tissue and Eye Services

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

Reference47 articles.

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4. NHS-BT Organ and Tissue Advisory Group (OTAG) . Tissue and eye procurement from solid organ donors (TEPSOD) activity report, 2016. Available: http://odt.nhs.uk/pdf/advisory_group_papers/OTAG/Tissue_&_Eye_Procurement_from_Solid_Organ_Donation.pdf

5. NHS-BT . Organ Donation and Transplantation - Activity report 2016/2017, 2017. Available: https://nhsbtdbe.blob.core.windows.net/umbraco-assets-corp/4657/activity_report_2016_17.pdf

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