Do Spanish Medical Students Understand the Concept of Brain Death?
Clicks: 227
ID: 268083
2017
Article Quality & Performance Metrics
Overall Quality
Improving Quality
0.0
/100
Combines engagement data with AI-assessed academic quality
Reader Engagement
Emerging Content
5.4
/100
18 views
18 readers
Trending
AI Quality Assessment
Not analyzed
Abstract
To analyze the level of understanding of the brain death concept among medical students in universities in Spain. This cross-sectional sociological, interdisciplinary, and multicenter study was performed on 9598 medical students in Spain. The sample was stratified by geographical area and academic year. A previously validated self-reported measure of brain death knowledge (questionnaire Proyecto Colaborativo Internacional Donante sobre la Donación y Transplante de Organos) was completed anonymously by students. Respondents completed 9275 surveys for a completion rate of 95.7%. Of those, 67% (n = 6190) of the respondents understood the brain death concept. Of the rest, 28% (n = 2652) did not know what it meant, and the remaining 5% (n = 433) believed that it did not mean that the patient was dead. The variables related to a correct understanding of the concept were: (1) being older (P < .001), (2) studying at a public university (P < .001), (3) year of medical school (P < .001), (4) studying at one of the universities in the south of Spain (P = .003), (5) having discussed donation and transplantation with the family (P < .001), (6) having spoken to friends about the matter (P < .001), (7) a partner’s favorable attitude toward donation and transplantation (P < .001), and (8) religious beliefs (P < .001). Sixty-seven percent of medical students know the concept of brain death, and knowledge improved as they advanced in their degree.
| Reference Key |
parrilla2017progressdo
Use this key to autocite in the manuscript while using
SciMatic Manuscript Manager or Thesis Manager
|
|---|---|
| Authors | Antonio Ríos,A. Lopez-Navas,A. López-López,F. J. Gómez,J. Iriarte,R. Herruzo,G. Blanco,F. J. Llorca,A. Asunsolo,P. Sánchez,P. R. Gutiérrez,A. Fernandez,Mª Teresa de Jesús,L. Martínez Alarcón,M. Del Olivo,L. Fuentes,J. R. Hernandez,J. Virseda,J. Yelamos,J. A. Bondía,A. M. Hernandez,M. A. Ayala,P. Ramirez,P. Parrilla;Antonio Ríos;A. Lopez-Navas;A. López-López;F. J. Gómez;J. Iriarte;R. Herruzo;G. Blanco;F. J. Llorca;A. Asunsolo;P. Sánchez;P. R. Gutiérrez;A. Fernandez;Mª Teresa de Jesús;L. Martínez Alarcón;M. Del Olivo;L. Fuentes;J. R. Hernandez;J. Virseda;J. Yelamos;J. A. Bondía;A. M. Hernandez;M. A. Ayala;P. Ramirez;P. Parrilla; |
| Journal | progress in transplantation |
| Year | 2017 |
| DOI |
10.1177/1526924817746687
|
| URL | |
| Keywords |
Citations
No citations found. To add a citation, contact the admin at info@scimatic.org
Comments
No comments yet. Be the first to comment on this article.