Transcript Slide 1
Donor Family Experience Pat Collins and Paula Aubrey Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Another family’s story… “In 2011, my 16 year-old son Aaron was involved in a road crash, where he sustained fatal head injuries. He was hit at just after 5 pm and his life support machine was turned off at just after midnight. Aaron was a kind and loving child, who had often spoken about organ donation. Obviously we never expected in a million years to be faced with the situation that occurred on that night, but one thing that sticks out in my mind is that we were never asked about donation.” Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 3 Another family’s story… “I raise this issue as a pointer to the service for the future. I utterly regret that I was not given the chance to “share” Aaron with someone else, to give life from his death. At the time, I needed someone to raise the issue. I simply didn’t have the fortitude to do so and in the context of difficult decisions that night, the decision to donate organs would have been the easiest of all.” Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 4 LONDON Family Approach and Consent Dr Phil Hopkins Dr Gus Vincent 4th June 2013 Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 5 Session Objectives • Understanding the importance of consent in overall supply of organs for transplantation. • Understanding why families say no. • Why using a 1st person consent model is often unhelpful. • A 3 stage approach – how best to inform and support families through their decision. • Understanding the role of the SNOD in the family approach. Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 6 LONDON Regional Data Phil Hopkins Clinical Lead Organ Donation Kings College Hospital, London Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 7 LONDON Regional Data Phil Hopkins Clinical Lead Organ Donation Kings College Hospital, London Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 8 LONDON Where are potential donors in London lost? 100 12th 90 18% % of possible donors 80 1% 5% 70 60 50 12% Conclusion: What’s happening with DBD? 46% 42% 40 4th 30 0 Possible donors* 12% 36% 20 10 12th 50% 7th 46% DBD, 87 donated (35% of possible donors) DCD, 50 donated (10% of possible donors, 18% of those not contraindicated) Neurological death tests performed (DBD only) Neurological death confirmed (DBD only) Contraindications Family approach Consent/ authorisation Donation * * DBD - Possible donors meeting criteria for neurological testing * DCD - Possible donors not confirmed dead by neurological criteria where imminent death anticipated and treatment withdrawn * * The annotated figures represent the percentage of remaining patients lost at each stage, not the percentage of all possible donors Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 9 Consent DBD LONDON DCD 56% 50% 64% 58% Doctor + + SNOD Doctor + = (68) (89) (56) (78) Eastern Scotland London South West 54% SNOD (58) UK DBD Doctor % approaches where SN-OD involved 100 92 80 + SNOD LONDON 92 91 88 85 83 75 75 75 60 62 58 52 40 20 0 Team -------- National rate 1 April 2012 to 31 March 2013, data as at 4 April 2013 Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 11 DCD Doctor % approaches where SN-OD involved 100 85 80 + 80 76 SNOD LONDON 83 80 74 69 65 60 58 53 53 40 37 20 0 Team -------- National rate 1 April 2012 to 31 March 2013, data as at 4 April 2013 Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 12 DBD consent/authorisation rate by ethnic group ODS team White patients BAME patients Family approached Consent/ authorisation rate* Family approached Consent/ authorisation rate* Eastern 99 75 13 46 London 119 68 50 36 Midlands 104 72 14 29 North West 98 76 6 - Northern 71 76 3 - Northern Ireland 45 62 3 - Scotland 70 80 1 - South Central 70 86 8 - South East 90 67 15 47 South Wales 46 65 2 - South West 53 70 - - Yorkshire 77 70 6 - 942 73 121 36 Total * Consent/authorisation rates are not show n w here the num ber of fam ilies approached is less than 10 1 April 2012 to 31 March 2013, data as at 4 April 2013 Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 13 DCD consent/authorisation rate by ethnic group ODS team White patients BAME patients Family approached Consent/ authorisation rate* Family approached Consent/ authorisation rate* Eastern 178 57 6 - London 134 57 44 32 Midlands 202 51 17 12 North West 171 53 10 20 Northern 90 68 2 - Northern Ireland 44 45 - - Scotland 129 53 2 - South Central 128 55 8 - South East 134 54 7 - South Wales 68 44 2 - South West 148 62 4 - Yorkshire 151 47 8 - 1577 54 110 30 Total * Consent/authorisation rates are not show n w here the num ber of fam ilies approached is less than 10 1 April 2012 to 31 March 2013, data as at 4 April 2013 Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 14 LONDON Best Practice in Family Approach and Consent Dr Angus Vincent Northern Regional CLOD Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 15 Where donation potential is lost. •We’ve known for years that low consent rates easily accounts for the biggest loss of potentially transplantable organs in the UK. •No other intervention could increase the availability of organs for transplantation to the extent that an increase in consent to 80% would. Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 16 PDA 2011/12 Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 17 2011/12 data DBD DCD Combined Approached 1090 1592 55% consent Consent given 694 793 % 64% 50% 45% family refusal DBD DCD Consent if on ODR 93% 79% Consent if not on ODR 48% 37% DBD DCD Consent - SNOD involved 68% 64% Consent - SNOD not involved 53% 30% Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 18 Poor DCD consent rates………… Number of deceased and living donors in the UK, 1 April 2002 - 31 March 2012 1100 1062 DBD donors DCD donors Living donors 1000 1055 1046 961 900 858 800 716 Number 702 697 700 664 637 634 599 600 611 624 637 652 485 472 500 609 436 397 400 373 335 288 300 200 200 159 127 100 61 73 87 2002-2003 2003-2004 2004-2005 0 2005-2006 2006-2007 2007-2008 Year 2008-2009 2009-2010 2010-2011 2011-2012 Source: Transplant activity in the UK, 2011-2012, NHS Blood and Transplant Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 19 Bottom line – UK Family Refusal Rate is 45% One of the highest family refusal rates in the world Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 20 Family refusal rates, 2010 Note – limited international data available on family refusal rates Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 21 BBC DoNation Survey August, 2005 Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 22 Why do families say no? Common themes are found Some amenable to intervention at time of request – so called ‘modifiable factors’ Less well understood grief reactions are important •Sacrifice •Guardianship of the body •Relationship between body and identity Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 23 PDA 11/12 – Top 3 Refusal Reasons Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 24 Consent and the Law • Deceased Donors Human Tissue Act (2004) – – – – ODR or other applicable advanced directive Nominated representative Prior witnessed statement Consent (or refusal) from an individual in a qualifying relationship • Living Donors (potential DCD) Mental Capacity Act (2005) Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 25 First Person Consent • Essentially – ODR – Family discussion • All of our national campaigns etc are aimed at this intervention • Not unanimous that this is the right approach Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 26 Problems with first person consent • “He said he didn’t want to be a donor” • “No we can’t be sure what he would have wanted” – Possibly up to 40% of refusals • The ODR is not informed consent • The process of being pressured to choose in life may lead to uniformed negative decisions too. • Registrants on the ODR are not representative of the donor pool ( 3 - 4 x more likely to not be on ODR). Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 27 Alternative to first person emphasis? Focus instead on supporting the family and their needs. • Compassion and care. •Understanding and acceptance. •The right information to make the right decision for them. Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 28 A synthesis of the available evidence surrounding the family approach and consent practice into a clinical guideline. Clear guidance on the conduct and content of the consent process Represents principles of good family care in any setting Sensitive to family needs Time and privacy Information in an understandable format Care and empathy Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 29 Evidence •Very large body •Qualitative, observational •Audit •Service Development Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 30 What does the evidence/guideline say about consent? Emphasises – Prior planning – A team approach – involvement of the SNOD and the importance of the presence of a trained individual – Ensuring understanding of death or its inevitability prior to discussion surrounding donation – Provision of the right information in the right way Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 31 Best Practice Guidance on the Family Approach Dr Angus Vincent Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 32 Short(ish), summary guidance. Endorsed by the professional bodies. ICS – (Kevin Gunning) FICM – (Julian Bion) Copy to every UK consultant (…….but we’re good at difficult conversations aren’t we?) Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 33 Approaching the families of potential organ donors The premise of this guideline is simple….. By looking after and supporting our families and providing them with the information they need to make the right decision for them, more of them will say “Yes” to organ donation. Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 34 Involving the specialist nurse-organ donation Training and core day to day business Timing and transition Information Language Modifiable factors Exploring ‘no’ Family Support Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Reluctance amongst some consultants Professional autonomy How to do introduce How to run the conversation 35 Introducing the SN-OD How best to do this? Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 36 Introducing the specialist nurse Planning Clip1 introducing SNOD.mp4 Embed Clip 1 Or play from Video: Title 2, Ch 1 – 11:40 – 12:00 Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Three discrete stages Family care and support The right information at the right time in the right way Allowing time No aspect of pressure or coercion In absence of prior consent, we must emphasise to the family that the decision is now for them. Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 38 Planning Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 39 Planning Planning Clip 2 Good planning.mp4 Embed Clip 2 Or play from video Title 2, Ch 1 – 04:03 – 07:13 Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Confirming understanding and acceptance Donation should not be discussed until the family has accepted the reality of the clinical situation DBD DCD Very strong evidence that failure to comprehend brain death is associated with a ‘no’. Conversation regarding withdrawal of life sustaining treatments. Take time. A process but with an end point. Emphasise death (not its inevitability). More familiar territory. Scans and diagrams. Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Help understanding that death is inevitable. 41 Breaking bad news? Clip 3 Breaking Bad news poor.mp4 Embed Clip 3 Or play from video Title 2, Ch1 – 08:20 – 10:07 Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Transition/ ‘Decoupling’ • At what point to move onto donation? • Same conversation or separate? • Each family is different. • Appreciating when a family have accepted and understood is usually not too hard. Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 43 Ensuring understanding Clip 4 Breaking bad news good.mp4 Embed Clip 4 Or play from video Title 2, Ch 1 13:20 – 15:40 Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Discussing Donation– usually led by SN-OD • Give information first, then seek an answer • Specific regarding the benefits, using positive language • Avoiding apologetic and negative statements Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 45 Discussing Donation – not on ODR • Open, exploratory questions • Empower the family – it is their decision (legally) • De-emphasise 1st person aspect Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 46 Raising donation – not on ODR Clip 5 Transition to SNOD not on ODR.mp4 Embed Clip 5 Or play from video Title 2, Ch 1 17:58 – 19:38 Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Seeking consent – on ODR • Consent has been given by the patient. • A presumptive, facilitating tone. Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 48 Registered on ODR Clip 6 Transition to SNOD on ODR.mp4 Embed Clip 6 Or play from video Title 8 Ch 1 05:50 – 07:21 Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Key Principles Plan Utilise the SN-OD. Take time to ensure full understanding of the clinical reality. Give information positively Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 50 Approaching Families – The Movie Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 51 Summary • Our huge family refusal rate is the main reason patients don’t get the transplant they need. • Evidence would strongly suggest that many refusals are as a result of us failing to get key aspects of the approach right. • A simple 3 stage strategy can ensure our families are cared for and informed. We believe many more will say “Yes” to donation as a result. Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 52