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Author Topic: Social network interventions to reduce race disparities in living kidney donatio  (Read 1106 times)

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Offline Clark

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https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/ctr.15064?campaign=wolearlyview

Social network interventions to reduce race disparities in living kidney donation: Design and rationale of the friends and family of kidney transplant patients study (FFKTPS)

Clinical Transplantation
Early View
Online Version of Record before inclusion in an issue
Jonathan Daw, Ashton M. Verdery, Selena E. Ortiz, Rhiannon Deierhoi Reed, Jayme E. Locke, Robert R. Redfield III, David Kloda, Michel Liu, Heather Mentsch, Deirdre Sawinski … See all authors
First published: 03 July 2023 https://doi.org/10.1111/ctr.15064

Abstract
Introduction
Racial/ethnic disparities in living donor kidney transplantation (LDKT) are a persistent challenge. Although nearly all directed donations are from members of patients’ social networks, little is known about which social network members take steps toward living kidney donation, which do not, and what mechanisms contribute to racial/ethnic LDKT disparities.
Methods
We describe the design and rationale of the Friends and Family of Kidney Transplant Patients Study, a factorial experimental fielding two interventions designed to promote LKD discussions. Participants are kidney transplant candidates at two centers who are interviewed and delivered an intervention by trained center research coordinators. The search intervention advises patients on which social network members are most likely to be LKD contraindication-free; the script intervention advises patients on how to initiate effective LKD discussions. Participants are randomized into four conditions: no intervention, search only, script only, or both search and script. Patients also complete a survey and optionally provide social network member contact information so they can be surveyed directly. This study will seek to enroll 200 transplant candidates. The primary outcome is LDKT receipt. Secondary outcomes include live donor screening and medical evaluations and outcomes. Tertiary outcomes include LDKT self-efficacy, concerns, knowledge, and willingness, measured before and after the interventions.
Conclusion
This study will assess the effectiveness of two interventions to promote LKD and ameliorate Black-White disparities. It will also collect unprecedented information on transplant candidates’ social network members, enabling future work to address network member structural barriers to LKD.
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