Family bereavement and organ donation in Spain: a mixed method, prospective cohort study protocol
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Martínez López, María Victoria; Cruz Quintana, Francisco; Rodríguez Hannikainen, Ivar Allan; Lara Rosales, Ramón; Pérez Marfil, María Nieves; Rodríguez Arias Vailhen, DavidEditorial
BMJ
Date
2023-01-06Referencia bibliográfica
Martinez-Lopez MV... [et al.]. Family bereavement and organ donation in Spain: a mixed method, prospective cohort study protocol. BMJ Open 2023;13:e066286. doi:[10.1136/bmjopen-2022-066286]
Abstract
Introduction There is a discrepancy in the literature as
to whether authorising or refusing the recovery of organs
for transplantation is of direct benefit to families in their
subsequent grieving process. This study aims to explore
the impact of the family interview to pose the option of
posthumous donation and the decision to authorise or
refuse organ recovery on the grieving process of potential
donors’ relatives.
Methods and analysis A protocol for mixed methods,
prospective cohort longitudinal study is proposed.
Researchers do not randomly assign participants to
groups. Instead, participants are considered to belong
to one of three groups based on factors related to their
experiences at the hospital. In this regard, families in G1,
G2 and G3 would be those who authorised organ donation,
declined organ donation or were not asked about organ
donation, respectively. Their grieving process is monitored
at three points in time: 1 month after the patient’s death,
when a semistructured interview focused on the lived
experience during the donation process is carried out, 3
months and 9 months after the death. At the second and
third time points, relatives’ grieving process is assessed
using six psychometric tests: State-Trait
Anxiety Inventory,
Beck Depression Inventory-II,
Inventory of Complicated
Grief, The Impact of Event Scale: Revised, Posttraumatic
Growth Inventory and Connor-Davidson
Resilience Scale.
Descriptive statistics (means, SDs and frequencies) are
computed for each group and time point. Through a series
of regression models, differences between groups in the
evolution of bereavement are estimated. Additionally,
qualitative analyses of the semistructured interviews are
conducted using the ATLAS. ti software.
Ethics and dissemination This study involves human
participants and was approved by Comité Coordinador
de Ética de la Investigación Biomédica de Andalucía
(CCEIBA) ID:1052-N-
21.
The results will be disseminated
at congresses and ordinary academic forums. Participants
gave informed consent to participate in the study before
taking part.