Back to Search
Start Over
Benefit in liver transplantation: a survey among medical staff, patients, medical students and non-medical university staff and students.
- Source :
- BMC Medical Ethics; 2/12/2018, Vol. 19, p1-1, 1p, 2 Charts, 6 Graphs
- Publication Year :
- 2018
-
Abstract
- <bold>Background: </bold>The allocation of any scarce health care resource, especially a lifesaving resource, can create profound ethical and legal challenges. Liver transplant allocation currently is based upon urgency, a sickest-first approach, and does not utilize capacity to benefit. While urgency can be described reasonably well with the MELD system, benefit encompasses multiple dimensions of patients' well-being. Currently, the balance between both principles is ill-defined.<bold>Methods: </bold>This survey with 502 participants examines how urgency and benefit are weighted by different stakeholders (medical staff, patients on the liver transplant list or already transplanted, medical students and non-medical university staff and students).<bold>Results: </bold>Liver transplant patients favored the sickest-first allocation, although all other groups tended to favor benefit. Criteria of a successful transplantation were a minimum survival of at least 1 year and recovery of functional status to being ambulatory and capable of all self-care (ECOG 2). An individual delisting decision was accepted when the 1-year survival probability would fall below 50%. Benefit was found to be a critical variable that may also trigger the willingness to donate organs.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>The strong interest of stakeholder for successful liver transplants is inadequately translated into current allocation rules. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 14726939
- Volume :
- 19
- Database :
- Complementary Index
- Journal :
- BMC Medical Ethics
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 127959957
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1186/s12910-018-0248-7