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. 2025 Feb;39(2):e70085.
doi: 10.1111/ctr.70085.

Identifying the Views and Needs of Family Physicians on Providing Care to Living Kidney Donors: A Cross-Sectional Survey

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Identifying the Views and Needs of Family Physicians on Providing Care to Living Kidney Donors: A Cross-Sectional Survey

Katya Loban et al. Clin Transplant. 2025 Feb.

Abstract

Optimizing the long-term care and follow-up of living kidney donors (LKDs) has been challenging, and prior LKDs have reported suboptimal healthcare experiences. Long-term care of LKDs is largely undertaken by primary care practitioners such as family physicians (FPs). We conducted a cross-sectional survey of Canadian FPs (n = 151). In our sample, 21.9% of participants reported that ≥1 patient had expressed interest in becoming a LKD, and 39.9% provided care to prior LKDs. While 55.5% knew how to find information on living kidney donation, 75.5% reported that information was not available in their practice. Only a minority had formal training in living kidney donation (<5%), and self-reported knowledge was low (median = 3 [scale 1 = not strong to 10 = very strong]). Knowledge improved significantly with educational activities, resources, experience, and practice needs. Attitudes toward living kidney donation were generally favorable with 71.5% stating that FPs should be involved in post-donation care. Clinical care guidelines (78.8%) were the most desired resource, followed by clear communication and reliable contact at transplant centers. Our findings inform the transplant community of an avenue to optimize LKD care by better-supporting FPs, who provide care to LKDs. This may enhance data collection on LKD outcomes and potentially increase donation rates.

Keywords: donor care; donor outcomes; kidney transplant; living donation; long‐term care.

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Conflict of interest statement

Dr. Shaifali Sandal has received an education grant from Amgen Canada to increase living donor kidney transplantation. Drs. Fortin, Bugeja, Dipchand, Mainra, and Sandal serve on the Organ and Tissue Donation and Transplantation committees of the Canadian Blood Services (unpaid roles). The rest of the authors have no relevant disclosures.

Figures

FIGURE 1
FIGURE 1
In a survey of Canadian family physicians (n = 151), their current practices (A and B), education (C), available (D) and desired resources (E) on living kidney donation are presented.

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