Department of Sociology & Criminology, The Pennsylvania State University.
Department of Sociology & Criminology, The Pennsylvania State University.
Transpl Immunol. 2024 Apr;83:101980. doi: 10.1016/j.trim.2023.101980. Epub 2024 Jan 4.
Racial/ethnic and gender disparities in living donor kidney transplantation are large and persistent but incompletely explained. One previously unexplored potential contributor to these disparities is differential willingness to donate to recipients in specific relationships such as children, parents, and friends. We collected and analyzed data from an online sample featuring an experimental vignette in which respondents were asked to rate their willingness to donate to a randomly chosen member of their family or social network. Results show very large differences in respondents' willingness to donate to recipients with different relationships to them, favoring children, spouses/partners, siblings, and parents, and disfavoring friends, aunts/uncles, and coworkers. Evidence suggesting an interactive effect between relationship, respondent race/ethnicity, respondent or recipient gender, was limited to a few cases. At the p < 0.05 level, the parent-recipient gender interaction was statistically significant, favoring mothers over fathers, as was other/multiracial respondents' greater willingness to donate to friends compared to Whites. Additionally, other interactions were significant at the p < 0.10 level, such as Hispanics' and women's higher willingness to donate to parents compared to Whites and men respectively, women's lower willingness to donate to friends compared to men, and Blacks' greater willingness to donate to coworkers than Whites. We also examined differences by age and found that older respondents were less willing to donate to recipients other than their parents. Together these results suggest that differential willingness to donate by relationship group may be a moderately important factor in understanding racial/ethnic and gender disparities in living donor kidney transplantation.
在活体捐赠肾脏移植中,存在着较大且持续存在的种族/民族和性别差异,但这些差异并不能完全得到解释。一个以前未被探索的潜在因素是,人们对特定关系中的受赠者的捐赠意愿存在差异,例如孩子、父母和朋友。我们收集并分析了来自在线样本的数据,该样本的特点是包含一个实验性情景描述,其中要求受访者对他们向随机选择的家庭成员或社交网络成员捐赠的意愿进行评分。结果显示,受访者对不同关系的受赠者的捐赠意愿存在很大差异,他们更愿意向孩子、配偶/伴侣、兄弟姐妹和父母捐赠,而不太愿意向朋友、姑姨/叔伯和同事捐赠。只有少数情况存在关系、受访者种族/民族、受访者或受赠者性别之间相互作用的证据。在 p < 0.05 水平上,受赠者的父母性别与捐赠者的关系具有统计学意义,母亲比父亲更受青睐,此外,其他/多种族裔受访者对朋友的捐赠意愿比对白人受访者更高。此外,在 p < 0.10 水平上,还有其他相互作用是显著的,例如,与白人相比,西班牙裔和女性更愿意向父母捐赠,与男性相比,女性更不愿意向朋友捐赠,与白人相比,黑人更愿意向同事捐赠。我们还考察了年龄差异,发现年龄较大的受访者不太愿意向除父母以外的受赠者捐赠。这些结果表明,按关系群体的不同捐赠意愿可能是理解活体捐赠肾脏移植中种族/民族和性别差异的一个重要因素。