Facebook Raises the Status of Organ Donation
Facebook introduced an option that lets users add "Organ Donor" to their profiles, just as someone would add their favorite movies or marital status.
Could something as little as putting your organ donor status
on your Facebook profile help save lives?
Raising awareness of organ donation on social media websites can help boost
donation rates, according to a new study.
Toni Lewis-Bennett think of hesitating when she was asked to
be an organ donor while applying for her driver’s license.
But years later,
when a friend at work became sick, she got tested to see if she could donate
her kidney to save his life. And with a green light from doctors, there was no
question in her mind that she would go through with the transplant.
In
May 2012, Facebook presented an option that lets users add “Organ Donor” to
their profiles, just as someone would add their favorite movies or marital
status. It also provided users a quick link to sign up for the national registry
of organ, eye and tissue donors through Donate Life. The Facebook
project was a partnership with a team from the Johns Hopkins Medical Center,
the Living Legacy Foundation of Baltimore and Donate Life America.
“I felt honored to be able to do it,”
Lewis-Bennett said. “I don’t think many people in their lives get the
opportunity to make a significant change in someone else’s.”
Over the last twenty years, regardless of many
efforts, the number of donors has remained moderately static, while the number
of people waiting for transplants has improved 10-fold.
The results, as chronicled in a report
released on Tuesday, were immediate. On the first day alone, more
than 57,000 people added the label to their profiles, and 13,054 people
registered to be donors online. A year later, 30,818 people had registered to
be donors, about five times more than pre-Facebook rates.
The Facebook initiative let users add their
organ-donation status to the timeline for their friends and family to see. It
also directed people to the official organ donation registry websites of their
states.
She said not enough people are part of the organ donor
dialogue, which doesn’t always come up in normal conversation. But a social
media campaign might be changing that culture.
For the authors of
the report, published in The American Journal of Transplantation, the surge in
awareness was one step toward resolving the chronic shortage of organs
available for transplants.
Cameron said his
team’s collaboration with Facebook was meant to address a disconnect between
donors and recipients.
“Eighteen people die every day waiting for an
organ,” said Dr. Andrew Cameron, the Hopkins surgeon who helped
spur the Facebook effort and the lead author of
the report. “But it’s not a medical crisis, it’s a social crisis.”
With social media
like Facebook and Twitter, Cameron said, the steps to consider donations, and
register, become a little more accessible.
Over the last twenty years, regardless of many efforts, the number of donors has remained moderately static, while the number of people waiting for transplants has improved 10-fold.
In a 2005 Gallup
poll, for example, 95 percent of respondents said they support organ donation.
But that doesn’t always translate to action: in 2009 there were about 14,600 donors for a
waitlist of 105,567 people needing organs, according to federal report on organ
and tissue transplants.
Though he had
earlier registered as an organ donor when he received his driver’s license, the
23-year-old said including the decision in a profile was as much a part of an
online identity as education or language skills. He also said noting the
decision to be a donor can have broad effect on a serious public health
problem.
Karan Chabbra, a
medical student and health care blogger, said he chose to display the Organ
Donor option on his profile the first day he saw it on Facebook.
“I think with this, and other similar issues,
this can be a social tipping point,” he said. “If I can show that I’m doing it,
it could subtly encourage others.”
“It’s frustrating
when we see patients dying who we know we can help,” he said. “We have to
rededicate ourselves and see how we can change that.”
Cameron said he and
his team are hoping to study and apply the results to make the campaign more
effective.
And it’s Chabbra’s
generation that could make the largest impact. According to the results, those
who displayed their organ donor status were largely 25- to 35-years-old and
included more women than men. The highest response was in the state of New
York.
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