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. 2015 Jul;119(7):980-9.
doi: 10.1016/j.healthpol.2015.01.017. Epub 2015 Feb 7.

Decision solution, data manipulation and trust: The (un-)willingness to donate organs in Germany in critical times

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Decision solution, data manipulation and trust: The (un-)willingness to donate organs in Germany in critical times

Lars Schwettmann. Health Policy. 2015 Jul.

Abstract

In 2011 and 2012 a change of rules and a data-manipulation scandal focused German public attention on organ donation. This increased citizens' background knowledge as well as their willingness to respond to surveys. The present study is an effort to seize this research opportunity and to create evidence on which policy recommendations can be conceivably based. It uses data from two major representative surveys from 2011 to 2012 to address four central questions: Which characteristics, experiences and attitudes correlate with the written or unwritten willingness of individuals to donate (WTD) their own organs post-mortem? How has the WTD changed over time? To what extent does the WTD depend on normative trust? Which factors correlate with trust? The data is analyzed through summary statistics and regression models. Several hypotheses regarding factors connected with the WTD are confirmed in the survey results. Altruistic motives, relevant knowledge and trust are decisive. The special role of trust is corroborated by the data. As current German politics prevents the introduction of post-mortem donation incentives, potential policy making proposals are restricted to institutional changes to regain trust including the implementation of an organ donor registry and the advancement of counselling talks with general practitioners.

Keywords: Decision solution; General public; Organ donation; Transplantation; Trust.

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