Eye donation in palliative and hospice care settings: patient views and missed opportunities: Findings from the Eye Donation from Palliative and Hospice care contexts: investigating Potential, Practice, Preference and Perceptions (EDiPPPP) study
Eye donation in palliative and hospice care settings: patient views and missed opportunities: Findings from the Eye Donation from Palliative and Hospice care contexts: investigating Potential, Practice, Preference and Perceptions (EDiPPPP) study
Background: there is a global shortage of donated eye tissue for use in sight saving and sight restoring operations such as corneal transplantation.
Patients who die in palliative and hospice care settings could potentially donate eye tissue, however the option of eye donation is not routinely raised in end of life planning discussions as health care providers (HCP) are very reluctant to discuss eye donation as they perceive it as something that will distress patients and family members.
Aims: this presentation will share findings regarding the views of patients and carers, including: their feelings and thoughts about the option of eye donation being raised with them, who they think should raise this issue, when this option should be discussed and who should be included in the discussion.
Results: findings are drawn from the NIHR funded national study: Eye Donation from Palliative and Hospice care contexts: investigating Potential, Practice, Preference and Perceptions taking place in three palliative care and three hospice care settings across England (EDiPPPP)and the global literature. In view of data from the Royal National Institute of Blind (RNIB) reporting that over two million people in the UK are living with sight loss and their prediction that this figure will double to nearly four million by 2050 it is imperative that anyone who could be, and would want to donate the gift of sight is offered the opportunity to do so, especially as they approach their end of life.
Madi-Segwagwe, Banyana
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Bracher, Michael
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Myall, Michelle
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Hurlow, Adam
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Faull, Christina
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Rayment, Clare
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Wale, Jane
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Short, Jill
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Mollart, Sarah
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Long-Sutehall, Tracy
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30 November 2021
Madi-Segwagwe, Banyana
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Bracher, Michael
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Myall, Michelle
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Hurlow, Adam
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Faull, Christina
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Rayment, Clare
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Wale, Jane
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Short, Jill
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Mollart, Sarah
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Long-Sutehall, Tracy
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Madi-Segwagwe, Banyana, Bracher, Michael, Myall, Michelle, Hurlow, Adam, Faull, Christina, Rayment, Clare, Wale, Jane, Short, Jill, Mollart, Sarah and Long-Sutehall, Tracy
(2021)
Eye donation in palliative and hospice care settings: patient views and missed opportunities: Findings from the Eye Donation from Palliative and Hospice care contexts: investigating Potential, Practice, Preference and Perceptions (EDiPPPP) study.
BMJ Supportive & Palliative Care, 11 (Supplement 2).
(doi:10.1136/spcare-2021-Hospice.18).
Record type:
Meeting abstract
Abstract
Background: there is a global shortage of donated eye tissue for use in sight saving and sight restoring operations such as corneal transplantation.
Patients who die in palliative and hospice care settings could potentially donate eye tissue, however the option of eye donation is not routinely raised in end of life planning discussions as health care providers (HCP) are very reluctant to discuss eye donation as they perceive it as something that will distress patients and family members.
Aims: this presentation will share findings regarding the views of patients and carers, including: their feelings and thoughts about the option of eye donation being raised with them, who they think should raise this issue, when this option should be discussed and who should be included in the discussion.
Results: findings are drawn from the NIHR funded national study: Eye Donation from Palliative and Hospice care contexts: investigating Potential, Practice, Preference and Perceptions taking place in three palliative care and three hospice care settings across England (EDiPPPP)and the global literature. In view of data from the Royal National Institute of Blind (RNIB) reporting that over two million people in the UK are living with sight loss and their prediction that this figure will double to nearly four million by 2050 it is imperative that anyone who could be, and would want to donate the gift of sight is offered the opportunity to do so, especially as they approach their end of life.
Text
EDiPPPP_HospiceUKPresentation_FINAL
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More information
e-pub ahead of print date: 30 November 2021
Published date: 30 November 2021
Venue - Dates:
Hospice UK National Conference: A New World, Liverpool ACC, Liverpool, United Kingdom, 2021-11-03 - 2021-11-05
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 473064
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/473064
ISSN: 2045-435X
PURE UUID: c5c427af-7990-445f-aba5-20cc29ce1fbc
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Date deposited: 09 Jan 2023 18:49
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:20
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Contributors
Author:
Banyana Madi-Segwagwe
Author:
Adam Hurlow
Author:
Christina Faull
Author:
Clare Rayment
Author:
Jane Wale
Author:
Jill Short
Author:
Sarah Mollart
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