• Aust Crit Care · Jul 2021

    Perceptions held by healthcare professionals concerning organ donation after circulatory death in an Australian intensive care unit without a local thoracic transplant service: A descriptive exploratory study.

    • Luke Milross, Thomas O'Donnell, Tracey Bucknall, David Pilcher, Alexis Poole, Benjamin Reddi, and Joshua Ihle.
    • Department of Intensive Care, The Alfred Hospital, Melbourne, Australia.
    • Aust Crit Care. 2021 Jul 29.

    Background And ObjectiveOrgan donation rates continue to be low in Australia compared with demand. Donation after circulatory death (DCD) has been an important strategy to increase donation rates, facilitated by advances in cardiopulmonary support in intensive care units (ICUs). However, DCD may harbour greater logistical challenges and unfavourable perceptions amongst some ICU healthcare professionals. The aim of this study was to evaluate and understand DCD perceptions at an Australian tertiary hospital.MethodsThis descriptive exploratory study was conducted at an Australian tertiary hospital. Participants were recruited voluntarily for interview via email and word-of-mouth through the hospital's ICU network. The study used a mixed-methods approach; five close-ended questions were included in the form of Likert scales followed by a semistructured interview with open-ended questions designed to understand participants' perceptions of DCD. Interviews were recorded, transcribed, and thematically analysed.ResultsSixteen participants were interviewed including eight intensive care doctors, four donation specialist nursing coordinators (DSNCs), and four bedside nurses. Likert responses demonstrated clinicians' support for both DCD and donation after brain death (DBD). Thematic analysis of the transcripts yielded three overarching themes including 'Contextual and environmental influences on DCD decision-making', 'Personal difficulties faced by clinicians in DCD decision-making', and 'Family influences on DCD decision-making'. Significant geographical separation between donation and organ retrieval teams, incurring significant resource utilisation, impacted the donation team's decision-making around DCD, as did a perceived disruption of ICU care to facilitate donation especially for cases where successful DCD was identified to be unlikely.ConclusionsOverall, DCD was as acceptable to participants as DBD. However, the geographical separation of this centre meant that logistical barriers potentially impacted the DCD process. Open lines of communication with transplant centres, local resourcing, and a culture of education, experience, and leadership may facilitate the DCD programs where distant retrieval is commonplace.Copyright © 2021 Australian College of Critical Care Nurses Ltd. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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