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Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHER N

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Page 1: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Donor Family Experience

Dawn McKeen&

Jacki Newby NORTHERN

Page 2: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Page 3: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

Another family’s story…

3Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

“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.”

Page 4: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

Another family’s story…

4Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

“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.”

Page 5: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Family Approach and Consent

Dr Jon Walton, CLOD, Freeman Hospital

Dr Angus Vincent

5

NORTHERN

Page 6: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

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.

6Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

NORTHERN

Page 7: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Regional Data

7

Dr Jon WaltonFreeman Hospital

NORTHERN

Page 8: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

Where are potential donors in the Northern team lost?

8Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Conclusion: The effect of the Northern Model.

3rd

1st

12th

1st

NORTHERN

Page 9: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

63%

=

Consent

+75%

+68%55%

(68) (89) (78)(56)Scotland South

WestEastern London

NORTHERN

DBD DCD

Doctor DoctorSNOD SNOD

Page 10: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

-------- National rate

83

92

58

91

75

88

75

92

85

62

52

75

% a

pp

roac

hes

wh

ere

SN

-OD

invo

lved

0

20

40

60

80

100

Team

Easte

rn

London

Mid

lands

North

Wes

t

Norther

n

Norther

n

Irela

nd

Scotla

nd

South

Centra

lSouth

East

South

Wal

es South

Wes

t

York

shire

1 April 2012 to 31 March 2013, data as at 4 April 2013

10Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

7th

NORTHERN+Doctor SNODDBD

Page 11: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

-------- National rate

76

85

53

80

58

80

53

74

83

69

37

65

% a

pp

roac

he

s w

her

e S

N-O

D i

nvo

lve

d

0

20

40

60

80

100

Team

Easte

rn

London

Mid

lands

North

Wes

t

Norther

n

Norther

n

Irela

nd

Scotla

nd

South

Centra

lSouth

East

South

Wal

es South

Wes

t

Yorksh

ire

1 April 2012 to 31 March 2013, data as at 4 April 2013

11Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

9th

NORTHERN+Doctor SNODDCD

Page 12: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

63% 67%

=

Consent

+75%

+68%55%

(58)(68) (89) (78)Scotland South

WestEastern UK

(56)London

NORTHERN

DBD DCD

Doctor DoctorSNOD SNOD

Page 13: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Best Practice in Family Approach and Consent

13

Dr Angus VincentNorthern Regional CLOD

NORTHERN

Page 14: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

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.

14Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Page 15: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

PDA 2011/12

15Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Page 16: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

2011/12 data DBD DCD

Approached 1090 1592

Consent given 694 793

% 64% 50%

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%

Combined

55% consent

45% family refusal

16Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Page 17: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

Poor DCD consent rates…………

Source: Transplant activity in the UK, 2011-2012, NHS Blood and Transplant

716697

664637 634

609 611 624 637 652

61 73 87127

159200

288

335373

436397

472 485

599

702

858

961

1062 1046 1055

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

800

900

1000

1100

2002-2003 2003-2004 2004-2005 2005-2006 2006-2007 2007-2008 2008-2009 2009-2010 2010-2011 2011-2012

Year

Nu

mb

er

DBD donors

DCD donors

Living donors

Number of deceased and living donors in the UK, 1 April 2002 - 31 March 2012

17Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Page 18: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

Bottom line – UK Family Refusal Rate is 45%

One of the highest family refusal rates in the world

18Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Page 19: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

Family refusal rates, 2010

Note – limited international data available on family refusal rates

19Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Page 20: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

BBC DoNation Survey

August, 2005

20Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Page 21: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

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

21Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Page 22: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

PDA 11/12 – Top 3 Refusal Reasons

22Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Page 23: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

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)

23Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Page 24: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

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

24Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Page 25: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

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).

25Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Page 26: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

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.

26Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Page 27: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

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 needsTime and privacyInformation in an understandable formatCare and empathy

27Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Page 28: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

Evidence

• Very large body

• Qualitative, observational

• Audit

• Service Development

28Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Page 29: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

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

29Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Page 30: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Best Practice Guidance on the Family Approach

Dr Angus Vincent

30

Page 31: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

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?)

31Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Page 32: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

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.

32Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Page 33: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

Involving the specialist nurse-organ donation

Training and core day to day businessTiming and transitionInformationLanguageModifiable factorsExploring ‘no’Family Support

Reluctance amongst some consultants

Professional autonomy

How to do introduce

How to run the conversation

33Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Page 34: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

Introducing the SN-OD

How best to do this?

34Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Page 35: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

PlanningIntroducing the specialist nurse

Clip1 introducing SNOD.mov

Embed Clip 1

Or play from Video: Title 2, Ch 1 – 11:40 – 12:00

Page 36: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

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.

36Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Page 37: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

Planning

37Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Page 38: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

PlanningPlanning

Clip 2 Good planning.mov

Embed Clip 2

Or play from video Title 2, Ch 1 – 04:03 – 07:13

Page 39: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

Confirming understanding and acceptance

Donation should not be discussed until the family has accepted the reality of the clinical situation

DBD

Very strong evidence that failure to comprehend brain death is associated with a ‘no’.

Take time.

Emphasise death (not its inevitability).

Scans and diagrams.

DCD

Conversation regarding withdrawal of life sustaining treatments.

A process but with an end point.

More familiar territory.

Help understanding that death is inevitable.

39Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Page 40: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Breaking bad news?

Clip 3 Breaking Bad news poor.mov

Embed Clip 3

Or play from video Title 2, Ch1 – 08:20 – 10:07

Page 41: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

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.

41Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Page 42: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Ensuring understanding

Clip 4 Breaking bad news good.mov

Embed Clip 4

Or play from video Title 2, Ch 1 13:20 – 15:40

Page 43: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

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

43Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Page 44: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

Discussing Donation – not on ODR

• Open, exploratory questions

• Empower the family – it is their decision (legally)

• De-emphasise 1st person aspect

44Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Page 45: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Raising donation – not on ODR

Clip 5 Transition to SNOD not on ODR.mov

Embed Clip 5

Or play from video Title 2, Ch 1 17:58 – 19:38

Page 46: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

Seeking consent – on ODR

• Consent has been given by the patient.

• A presumptive, facilitating tone.

Organ Donation Past, Present and Future 46

Page 47: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Registered on ODR

Clip 6 Transition to SNOD on ODR.mov

Embed Clip 6

Or play from video Title 8 Ch 1 05:50 – 07:21

Page 48: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

Key Principles

Plan

Utilise the SN-OD.

Take time to ensure full understanding of the clinical reality.

Give information positively

48Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Page 49: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

Approaching Families – The Movie

49Organ Donation Past, Present and Future

Page 50: Organ Donation Past, Present and Future Donor Family Experience Dawn McKeen & Jacki Newby NORTHERN

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.

50Organ Donation Past, Present and Future