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American Muslim Physician Attitudes Toward Organ Donation
Authors:Mustafa Ahmed  Paul Kubilis  Aasim Padela
Institution:1.Division of Cardiovascular Medicine,University of Florida College of Medicine,Gainesville,USA;2.Department of Neurosurgery,University of Florida,Gainesville,USA;3.Initiative on Islam and Medicine, Program on Medicine and Religion,University of Chicago,Chicago,USA;4.Section of Emergency Medicine, Department of Medicine,University of Chicago,Chicago,USA;5.MacLean Center for Clinical Medical Ethics,University of Chicago,Chicago,USA
Abstract:Religious beliefs and values impact Muslim patients' attitudes toward a variety of healthcare decisions, including organ donation. Muslim physician attitudes toward organ donation, however, are less well studied. Utilizing a national survey of physician members of the Islamic Medical Association of North America, relationships between religiosity, patterns of bioethics resource utilization, and sociodemographic characteristics with attitudes toward organ donation were assessed. Of 255 respondents, 251 answered the target question, “in your understanding, does Islamic bioethics and law permit organ donation?.” 177 respondents (70%) answered positively, 30 (12%) negatively, and 46 (18%) did not know. Despite the overwhelming majority of respondents believing organ donation to be permitted by Islamic bioethics and law, fewer than one-third (n = 72, 30%) are registered donors. Several sociodemographic features had a positive association with believing organ donation to be permitted: ethnic descent other than that of South Asian, having immigrated to the USA as an adult, and male sex. When using a logistic regression model controlling for these three variables as potential confounders, the best predictor of Muslim physicians believing organ donation to be permissible was utilization of an Imam as a bioethical resource (odds ratio 5.9, p = 0.02). Religiosity variables were not found to be associated with views on the Islamic permissibility of organ donation. While Muslim American physicians appear to believe there is religious support for organ donation, only a minority sign up to be donors. Greater study is needed to understand how physicians' attitudes regarding donation impact discussions between patients and physicians regarding the possibility of donating and of receiving a transplant.
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