Artigo Revisado por pares

Continuously Evaluating Performance in Deceased Donation: The Spanish Quality Assurance Program

2012; Elsevier BV; Volume: 12; Issue: 9 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1111/j.1600-6143.2012.04138.x

ISSN

1600-6143

Autores

Gloria de la Rosa, Beatriz Domínguez‐Gil, R. Matesanz, Silvia Ramón, J. Alonso-Álvarez, Juan J. Araiz, G. Choperena, José Luis Escat Cortés, D. Daga, J. Elizalde, D. Escudero, Enrique Bravo Escudero, Carlos Fernández‐Renedo, M.A. Frutos, Juan Carlos Galán, M.A. Getino, Francisco Guerrero, Mariana Bocanegra Lara, L. López-Sánchez, S. Macías, J. Martínez-Guillén, N. Masnou, Sebastián Higuera Pedraza, Teresa Pont, Ángel Sánchez‐Rodríguez,

Tópico(s)

Palliative Care and End-of-Life Issues

Resumo

The Spanish Quality Assurance Program applied to the process of donation after brain death entails an internal stage consisting of a continuous clinical chart review of deaths in critical care units (CCUs) performed by transplant coordinators and periodical external audits to selected centers. This paper describes the methodology and provides the most relevant results of this program, with information analyzed from 206,345 CCU deaths. According to the internal audit, 2.3% of hospital deaths and 12.4% of CCU deaths in Spain yield potential donors (clinical criteria consistent with brain death). Out of the potential donors, 54.6% become actual donors, 26% are lost due to medical unsuitability, 13.3% due to refusals to donation, 3.1% due to maintenance problems and 3% due to other reasons. Although the national pool of potential donors after brain death has progressively decreased from 65.2 per million population (pmp) in 2001 to 49 pmp in 2010, the number of actual donors after brain death has remained at about 30 pmp. External audits reveal that the number of actual donors could be 21.6% higher if all potential donors were identified and preventable losses avoided. We encourage other countries to develop similar comprehensive approaches to deceased donation performance.

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