Deceased organ donation in Singapore : knowledge, attitudes and challenges

Background: With organ transplantation being the standard of care for end-stage organ failure today, the shortage of transplantable organs is a global problem. To address this, Singapore adopts an opt-out approach to deceased organ procurement in the form of the Human Organ Transplant Act (HOTA). Co...

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Main Author: Chua, Jacqueline Jie Lin
Other Authors: Kwek Tong Kiat
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2017
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/72620
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-726202020-11-01T05:32:57Z Deceased organ donation in Singapore : knowledge, attitudes and challenges Chua, Jacqueline Jie Lin Kwek Tong Kiat Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine) DRNTU::Science::Medicine Background: With organ transplantation being the standard of care for end-stage organ failure today, the shortage of transplantable organs is a global problem. To address this, Singapore adopts an opt-out approach to deceased organ procurement in the form of the Human Organ Transplant Act (HOTA). Consent to organ donation is presumed in the absence of objection. This is complemented by an opt-in system under the Medical (Therapy, Education, Research) Act (MTERA). Although these laws are not new, public awareness continues to be poor, contributing to a falsely low objection rate. Aims and Methods: After reviewing the recruitment workflow for potential deceased donors, studying cases in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) and conducting a survey of knowledge and attitudes amongst healthcare workers, we studied the impact of an opt-out system in Singapore. The main concerns with the status quo are the uncertainty families face in second-guessing the deceased’s non-objection status, the resulting emotional trauma and breakdown in physician-family relations. Results: Our results highlight strong public support for organ donation, with 90.5% of respondents (n=201) willing to do so. 77.0% were willing to donate any useable organs. However, knowledge about the specifics of HOTA was poor, with 38.3% not even knowing it is opt-out and 92.5% being unclear of who the law applied to. This supports our postulation that objector rates are falsely low due to ignorance and apathy and raises a mandate for improving publicity efforts. Conclusion: There is scope for renewed public outreach efforts. In order to improve deceased organ donation rates, public engagement should encourage individuals to register their views whether as HOTA objections or as MTERA pledgers. It should also be more systematic and consistent in engaging individuals throughout their life to reevaluate end-of-life decisions. Such a conscientious, proactive public may eventually be weaned off presumed consent to fully exercise their right to autonomy. Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery 2017-08-30T08:08:29Z 2017-08-30T08:08:29Z 2017 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/72620 en 9 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Science::Medicine
spellingShingle DRNTU::Science::Medicine
Chua, Jacqueline Jie Lin
Deceased organ donation in Singapore : knowledge, attitudes and challenges
description Background: With organ transplantation being the standard of care for end-stage organ failure today, the shortage of transplantable organs is a global problem. To address this, Singapore adopts an opt-out approach to deceased organ procurement in the form of the Human Organ Transplant Act (HOTA). Consent to organ donation is presumed in the absence of objection. This is complemented by an opt-in system under the Medical (Therapy, Education, Research) Act (MTERA). Although these laws are not new, public awareness continues to be poor, contributing to a falsely low objection rate. Aims and Methods: After reviewing the recruitment workflow for potential deceased donors, studying cases in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) and conducting a survey of knowledge and attitudes amongst healthcare workers, we studied the impact of an opt-out system in Singapore. The main concerns with the status quo are the uncertainty families face in second-guessing the deceased’s non-objection status, the resulting emotional trauma and breakdown in physician-family relations. Results: Our results highlight strong public support for organ donation, with 90.5% of respondents (n=201) willing to do so. 77.0% were willing to donate any useable organs. However, knowledge about the specifics of HOTA was poor, with 38.3% not even knowing it is opt-out and 92.5% being unclear of who the law applied to. This supports our postulation that objector rates are falsely low due to ignorance and apathy and raises a mandate for improving publicity efforts. Conclusion: There is scope for renewed public outreach efforts. In order to improve deceased organ donation rates, public engagement should encourage individuals to register their views whether as HOTA objections or as MTERA pledgers. It should also be more systematic and consistent in engaging individuals throughout their life to reevaluate end-of-life decisions. Such a conscientious, proactive public may eventually be weaned off presumed consent to fully exercise their right to autonomy.
author2 Kwek Tong Kiat
author_facet Kwek Tong Kiat
Chua, Jacqueline Jie Lin
format Final Year Project
author Chua, Jacqueline Jie Lin
author_sort Chua, Jacqueline Jie Lin
title Deceased organ donation in Singapore : knowledge, attitudes and challenges
title_short Deceased organ donation in Singapore : knowledge, attitudes and challenges
title_full Deceased organ donation in Singapore : knowledge, attitudes and challenges
title_fullStr Deceased organ donation in Singapore : knowledge, attitudes and challenges
title_full_unstemmed Deceased organ donation in Singapore : knowledge, attitudes and challenges
title_sort deceased organ donation in singapore : knowledge, attitudes and challenges
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/72620
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