A qualitative systematic review of anonymous/unspecified living kidney and liver donors' perspectives

PLoS One. 2022 Dec 30;17(12):e0277792 doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0277792.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES & BACKGROUND:

Anonymous live organ donors or unspecified donors are individuals willing to be organ donors for any transplant recipient with whom they have no biological or antecedent emotional relationship. Despite excellent recipient outcomes and the potential to help address organ scarcity, controversy surrounds the unconditional act of gifting one's organs to an unrelated recipient. This qualitative systematic review provides insights into the first-hand experiences, motivations, and challenges that unspecified donors face.

METHODS:

A systematic search was conducted on Medline, Embase, CINAHL, PsycINFO, and Web of Science database for qualitative literature regarding unspecified living donors' motivations and experiences in liver and kidney transplantation. An inductive thematic analysis was conducted to generate themes and supportive subthemes.

RESULTS:

12 studies were included. The four major themes were (i) motivations, (ii) perception of risks, (iii) donor support, and (iv) benefits of donation. Unspecified donors demonstrated a deep sense of social responsibility but tended to underestimate health risks in favour of benefits for recipients. Despite the lack of emotional support from family and friends, the decision to donate was a resolute personal decision for donors. Majority benefitted emotionally and did not express regret.

CONCLUSION:

This qualitative review bridges the gap in literature on unspecified living donor psychology and provides a comprehensive understanding of the decision-making matrix and experiences of donors.

Metadata
Funding: Funding not described
Publication type: Systematic Review
Organ: Various; Kidney; Liver
Language: English
Author email: whlim0403@gmail.com
MeSH terms: Humans; Altruism; Kidney; Kidney Transplantation; Liver; Living Donors; Qualitative Research; Liver Transplantation