Barriers and facilitators towards deceased organ donation: a qualitative study among three major religious groups in Chandigarh, and Chennai, India
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Affiliation
University of BedfordshireOHUM Healthcare Solutions Private Ltd
All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS)
Issue Date
2024-10-06Subjects
deceased organ donationorgan donation
organ donation
religion
Subject Categories::L510 Health & Welfare
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This study aimed to examine the barriers and facilitators of the public toward deceased organ donation in Chandigarh, and Chennai, India, from three major religious groups, Hinduism, Islamism, and Christianity. Twenty-five focus groups were conducted (n = 87) stratified by study region, religion, sex, and age. Data were analysed using framework analysis. The results revealed that individuals were primarily willing to donate their organs. However, their religious views regarding death, after-life beliefs, funeral ritual practices, and lack of knowledge regarding their religion's position toward deceased organ donation created tension and ambiguity in the decision-making. However, younger age groups (18-30 years) appeared more open and positive toward deceased organ donation. The conclusion demands a clear need for religious leaders and stakeholders to address their religion's stance, which creates tension and ambiguity in any uncertainties surrounding cultural and religious-based views among the Indian populatCitation
Vincent BP, Sood V, Thanigachalam S, Cook E, Randhawa G (2024) 'Barriers and facilitators towards deceased organ donation: a qualitative study among three major religious groups in Chandigarh, and Chennai, India', Journal of Religion and Health, 63 , pp.4303-4322.Publisher
SpringerJournal
Journal of Religion and HealthPubMed ID
39369372Additional Links
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10943-024-02148-8Type
ArticleLanguage
enISSN
0022-4197EISSN
1573-6571Sponsors
This article is a part of Britzer Paul Vincent’s PhD work at the Institute for Health Research, University of Bedfordshire, United Kingdom, funded by the Global Challenges Research Fund. Along with this, the research assistants Vibhusha Sood and Srinivasan Thanigachalam were also funded for their contributions.ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1007/s10943-024-02148-8
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