Hong Kong Academy of Medicine. CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
EDITORIAL
Passive-positive organ donor registration
behaviour
KM Chow, FHKAM (Medicine), FRCP1; SF Lui, FHKAM (Medicine), FRCP2
1 Department of Medicine and Therapeutics, Prince of Wales Hospital, Hong Kong
2 The Jockey Club School of Public Health and Primary Care, Faculty of Medicine, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Corresponding author: Dr KM Chow (Chow_Kai_Ming@alumni.cuhk.net)
In this issue of Hong Kong Medical Journal, Teoh et al1
examine passive-positive organ donors in Hong
Kong and potential means of engaging them. As
the authors note, there is a significant mismatch
between organ donors and patients awaiting
transplant. In Hong Kong, more than 2000 dialysis
patients are awaiting a kidney transplant, but there
are fewer than 100 kidney transplants performed
each year. Rather than investigating the reasons
for refusing consent to donate deceased organs,
the authors adopted another approach and instead
surveyed passive-positive donors. These passive-positive
donors refer to members of the public who
support organ donation but have not registered as
potential donors. The authors explored the reasons
that these individuals gave for not registering. A key
finding from the survey is that almost two thirds of
people who are willing to donate their organs after
death have not registered on the Centralised Organ
Donation Register.1 The percentage of local passive-positive
donors is even higher than that in the United
States.
Why is the act of registration an important
step to look into? A crucial aspect of facilitating
behaviour change is making use of the commitment
and consistency principle. If you want to lose weight,
for instance, you should sign a contract with yourself
(if not a contract with the fitness centre). Once you
commit to a goal or an idea, you are much more
inclined to follow through and achieve the goal and
honour your commitment. As simple a step as it
might seem, signing up as a donor turns out to be an
important one.
Is the step of signing up as a donor going to
make a huge difference? The answer is obviously
‘yes’, but it is not the only step. After you commit
to a contract verbally or in writing, you should go
one step further. Make the contract public, for all
others to know, or else we you might simply back out
of the deal. Unsurprisingly, human beings strive for
consistency in our commitments, but more so when
we are being watched. The most effective stamp to
seal a contract is to share the contract on your social
media platforms, and let others know, not only your
next of kin. This is one of the best ways to enlist your
friends and followers to hold you accountable. At the same time, this is a tool for someone who has
signed up as an organ donor to encourage his or her
followers to do the same.
How can social media help? The power of
social media is immense. Social media platforms
such as Facebook and Twitter have developed
tools and public advocacy campaigns that can be
used to engage and facilitate organ donation.2 For
example, on the first day of launching the Facebook
organ donor initiative (when members are allowed
to specify ‘Organ Donor’ as part of their profile),
there was a 21.1-fold increase in online organ donor
registration rate in the United States.3
Is social media the only solution? Peer influence
from social media on the donor registration rate is
not the ultimate goal. Boosting the number of
registered or prospective donors is insufficient,
although the figures are easily measurable. Equally
important is the value of being an organ donor.
While the act of registration is the first step, that
does not necessarily materialise as a donation if we
cannot create a state of mind that donating organs
can save lives. Organ donation will not happen if
we cannot engage the prospective donor’s family
members who might veto the donation plan.
Additional interventions are needed to improve the
public trust and foster belief in the meaningful act of
donating organs.
What is the take-away message? We should
heed the lesson from the study by Teoh et al1
regarding how to become a registered donor.
However, continued efforts should be made to
promote why people should to donate to save a life.
We need a social movement to encourage the people
of Hong Kong to talk about organ donation and end
of life care matters, to share their view with their
family, both informally via casual conversation, or
better still, formally via registration. The expressed
wish of a potential donor is very important in
helping a family to agree to organ donation in a
distressing time of a loved one who will sadly be
passing away soon. It is difficult for the family to
comprehend or to accept the situation. May they be
comforted with knowing not all is lost. It is not only
the end of one life, but the beginning of a new life for
many recipients waiting for organ transplantation.
Author contributions
All authors contributed to the concept or design of the
study, and critical revision of the manuscript for important
intellectual content. KM Chow drafted the manuscript.
All authors had full access to the data, contributed to the
study, approved the final version for publication, and take
responsibility for its accuracy and integrity.
Conflicts of interest
All authors have disclosed no conflicts of interest.
Funding/support
This editorial received no specific grant from any funding agency in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit
sectors.
References
1. Teoh JY, Lau BS, Far NY, et al. Attitudes, acceptance, and
registration in relation to organ donation in Hong Kong:
a cross-sectional study. Hong Kong Med J 2020;26:192-200. Crossref
2. McCarthy M. Facebook and Twitter join US effort to
attract a million new organ donor registrations. BMJ
2016;353:i3369. Crossref
3. Cameron AM, Massie AB, Alexander CE, et al. Social media and organ donor registration: the Facebook effect.
Am J Transplant 2013;13:2059-65. Crossref