PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Does social capital explain community-level differences in organ donor designation?

New study suggests tailoring campaigns to neighborhoods and communities

2015-09-14
(Press-News.org) MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, Mass. (Sept. 14, 2015)--A new study finds that the characteristics of one's community may be as important as individual factors on the decision to become an organ donor. The study, published in The Milbank Quarterly, shows an association between sociodemographic/social capital measures and organ donor registrations across 4,466 Massachusetts neighborhoods. In order to increase organ donation registrations, the research suggests that future health policies adopt a community-level focus.

The shortage of organs for transplantation has reached unprecedented levels. Organ donor registration rates vary widely despite both national and state campaigns to increase donations.

"We found that community-level sociodemographic and social capital variables explain more than half the variation that we observed in organ donor registrations in Massachusetts," said first author Keren Ladin, Ph.D., M.Sc., an assistant professor and health policy researcher in the department of occupational therapy at Tufts University's Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. "Neighborhoods that have lower social capital, as measured by high levels of both racial segregation and violent crime, and low socioeconomic status and voting participation, also have lower levels of organ donor registration compared to other Massachusetts neighborhoods."

The factors that appear to have a positive relationship to increased donor registrations include higher income, employment and owner-occupied housing. The findings also suggest that when populations are less isolated and better racially integrated, they exhibit higher rates of altruistic behavior such as organ donor registration.

The authors point out that the study reinforces the importance of tailored messages at the neighborhood level and strategic partnerships with community-based organizations in the effort to increase organ donor designation.

Using 3.3 million geocoded records from the Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicles that were linked to sociodemographic data from the U.S. Census, Ladin and colleagues obtained community-level measures and social capital characteristics including residential segregation, voter registration and participation, residential mobility, violent-death rate and religious characteristics.

The combined data included 4,466 Massachusetts neighborhoods and used geospatial modeling to account for the spill-over of adjacent block groups and multivariate regression analysis to examine the relationship of social capital and community-level characteristics with organ donor registration rates.

"Research has focused on individual-level determinants, without much consideration for contextual factors, such as neighborhood environment and social organizations. A better understanding of these contextual determinants of organ donor registrations, including social capital, may enhance efforts to increase organ donation. The findings may help explain differences in rates of organ donor registration among communities of color and suggest that interventions tailored to communities, rather than individuals, may help to increase organ donation," said Ladin.

"Like voting or vaccination, organ donor designation is a collective action problem. The community benefits are significant, but individual incentives to participate are low. Social capital increases the probability of collective action by fostering norms of reciprocity and cooperation while increasing the costs of noncompliance," she continued.

Ladin is also an assistant professor in the department of public health and community medicine at Tufts University School of Medicine and director of the lab for Research on Ethics, Aging, and Community Health in the occupational therapy department and community health program at Tufts.

More than 120,000 Americans are waiting for organ donations, according to the Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network.

INFORMATION:

Additional authors are Rui Wang, Ph.D., of Harvard Medical School; Aaron Fleishman of the Transplant Institute at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center; Matthew Boger of the New England Organ Bank; and James R. Rodrigue, Ph.D., of Harvard Medical School and the Transplant Institute at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center.

Ladin was supported by the Neubauer Faculty Fellowship at Tufts University. Research reported in this publication was supported in part by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) under award number D71HS22061. Rodrigue was also supported by the HRSA of the HSS under award number D71HS24204.

Citation: Ladin, K., Wang, R., Fleishman, A., Boger, M., and Rodrique, J.R. (September 2015). Does Social Capital Explain Community-Level Differences in Organ Donor Designation? The Milbank Quarterly (93, 3). 609-641 DOI: 10.1111/1468-0009.12139

Tufts University, located on three Massachusetts campuses in Boston, Medford/Somerville, and Grafton, and in Talloires, France, is recognized among the premier research universities in the United States. Tufts enjoys a global reputation for academic excellence and for the preparation of its students as leaders in a wide range of professions. A growing number of innovative teaching and research initiatives span all Tufts campuses, and collaboration among faculty and students in the undergraduate, graduate and professional programs across the university's schools is widely encouraged.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

World has lost 3 percent of its forests since 1990

2015-09-14
The globe's forests have shrunk by three per cent since 1990 - an area equivalent to the size of South Africa - despite significant improvements in conservation over the past decade. The UN's Global Forest Resources Assessment (GFRA) 2015 was released this week, revealing that while the pace of forest loss has slowed, the damage over the past 25 years has been considerable. Total forest area has declined by three per cent between 1990 and 2015 from 4,128 million hectares to 3,999 million hectares - a loss of 129 million hectares. Significantly, loss of natural forested ...

Alzheimer's-disease-related proteases control axonal guidance by regulating growth cone dynamics

2015-09-14
Alzheimer's-disease-related proteases, BACE1 and APH1B-y-secretase, control axonal guidance by regulating growth cone dynamics BACE1 is the major drug target for Alzheimer's disease, but we know surprisingly little about its normal function in the CNS. Soraia Barão and Bart De Strooper (VIB/KU Leuven) now show that this protease is critically involved in axonal guidance processes in thalamic and hippocampal neurons. An active membrane bound proteolytic CHL1 fragment is generated by BACE1 upon Sema3A binding. This fragment relays the Sema3A signal to the neuronal ...

Long sleep and high blood copper levels go hand in hand

2015-09-14
Persons sleeping less than 6 hours or more than 10 hours suffer from low-grade inflammation more often than persons sleeping 7-8 hours per night. This was observed in a University of Eastern Finland study focusing on the health and lifestyle habits among middle-aged men. "Earlier studies have found a relation between reduced sleep and low-grade inflammation," says Maria Luojus, MHSc, one of the study researchers. Furthermore, low-grade inflammation occurs in overweight, depression and diabetes. The study is the first to analyse the association between sleep duration ...

20-year follow-up of academic EORTC boost no-boost trial earns Best Abstract at ECC 2015

2015-09-14
Results of a 20-year follow-up of the academic EORTC 22881-10882 boost no-boost trial presented as a "Best Abstract" at the European Cancer Congress 2015 in Vienna show that young age, high-grade invasive tumor, and the presence of associated ductal carcinoma in situ were all factors increasing the local recurrence rate. An earlier analysis had already shown that young age and high-grade invasive carcinoma were the most important risk factors for local relapse in this trial conducted from 1989 to 1996. Dr. Conny Vrieling of the Clinique des Grangettes in Geneva, Switzerland, ...

Smokers at higher risk of losing their teeth, research shows

2015-09-14
A new study has confirmed that regular smokers have a significantly increased risk of tooth loss. Male smokers are up to 3.6 times more likely to lose their teeth than non-smokers, whereas female smokers were found to be 2.5 times more likely. The research, published in the Journal of Dental Research, is the output of a long-term longitudinal study of the EPIC Potsdam cohort in Germany carried out by researchers at the University of Birmingham and the German Institute of Human Nutrition. Tooth loss remains a major public health problem worldwide. In the UK, 15% of ...

Nutritional deficiencies common before weight loss surgery

2015-09-14
Malnutrition is a known complication of weight loss surgery, but findings from a small study by researchers at Johns Hopkins show many obese people may be malnourished before they undergo the procedure. "Our results highlight the often-overlooked paradox that abundance of food and good nutrition are not one and the same," says senior investigator Kimberley Steele, M.D., Ph.D., associate professor of surgery at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. "Overweight and obese people can suffer from nutritional deficiencies, and those who care for them should be aware ...

An even more versatile optical chip

2015-09-14
Telecommunication networks will soon reach the physical limits of current technology and in order to overcome the current bottleneck, they will have to exploit the quantum properties of light. Roberto Morandotti and his INRS team are paving the way to this technological revolution by removing the technical barriers of quantum photonics through the use of their optical chips. Recently they directly generated cross-polarized (orthogonal) photon pairs on a chip, a first in quantum optics. Polarization will now be among the controllable parameters for harnessing light in a ...

Swinging on 'monkey bars': Motor proteins caught in the act

2015-09-14
The first images of motor proteins in action are published in the journal Nature Communications today. These proteins are vital to complex life, forming the transport infrastructure that allows different parts of cells to specialise in particular functions. Until now, the way they move has never been directly observed. Researchers at the University of Leeds and in Japan used electron microscopes to capture images of the largest type of motor protein, called dynein, during the act of stepping along its molecular track. Dr Stan Burgess, at the University of Leeds' ...

Elephants born when mothers are stressed age faster and produce fewer offspring

Elephants born when mothers are stressed age faster and produce fewer offspring
2015-09-14
Elephants born into stressful situations have fewer offspring and age faster, researchers at the University of Sheffield have found. Scientists discovered that Asian elephants born during times when their mothers experience highest stress levels produce significantly fewer offspring in their lifetime despite having higher rates of reproduction at an early age. The research team, from the University's Department of Animal and Plant Sciences, also found that those animals born under stress declined much more rapidly in older age, decades later. Lead author Dr Hannah ...

Mediterranean diet plus olive oil associated with reduced breast cancer risk

2015-09-14
Eating a Mediterranean diet supplemented with extra virgin olive oil was associated with a relatively lower risk of breast cancer in a study of women in Spain, according to an article published online by JAMA Internal Medicine. Breast cancer is a frequently diagnosed cancer and a leading cause of death in women. Diet has been extensively studied as a modifiable risk factor in the development of breast cancer but epidemiologic evidence on the effect of specific dietary factors is inconsistent. The Mediterranean diet is known for its abundance of plant foods, fish and ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Tiny 3D printer reconstructs tissues during vocal cord surgery

New genetic marker found to predict severe gout drug reactions in US patients

Schizophrenia, bipolar, or major depressive disorder and postacute sequelae of COVID-19

Fruit flies offer new insights into how human Alzheimer’s Disease risk genes affect the brain

University of Phoenix College of Doctoral Studies releases white paper on mentoring programs to strengthen worker autonomy and competitive edge

International scientists issue State of the Climate Report, highlight mitigation strategies

“State of the climate” 2025: Earth’s vital signs worsen, science shows options for livable future

New nanomedicine wipes out leukemia in animal study

National TRAP Program targets ghostly issue with second round of coastal clean up funding

Six scientists receive AFAR grants for junior faculty

Climate report: Earth on dangerous path but rapid action can avert the worst outcomes

American Pediatric Society announces Bruce D. Gelb, MD, as recipient of its prestigious 2026 APS John Howland Award

Friendships can ease loneliness for dementia caregivers

Researchers pose five guiding questions to improve the use of artificial intelligence in physicians’ clinical decision-making

Global call to “Help the Kelp” with US $14 billion conservation target

Artificial tongue uses milk to determine heat level in spicy foods

IU Kelley Futurecast: AI and energy infrastructure may buoy US economy in 2026

The biggest threats to maintaining fat bike trails: climate change and volunteer burnout

AI models for drug design fail in physics

Practice pattern of aerosol drug therapy in acute respiratory distress syndrome patients: An aero-in-ICU study

GLIS model as a predictor of outcomes in older adults with heart failure

Molecules in motion: pioneering the era of supramolecular robotics

Faster and more reliable crystal structure prediction of organic molecules

Thankful at work: A two-week gratitude journal boosts employee engagement

Fibroblasts: Hidden drivers of heart failure progression

IOCB Prague unveils a fundamentally faster, more affordable way to produce quantum nanodiamonds

Artificial intelligence takes the lead in revolutionizing cancer research explored at NFCR’s 2025 Global Summit and Award Ceremonies for Cancer Research and Entrepreneurship.

Switching memories on and off with epigenetics

This is your brain without sleep

3D DNA looping discovery in rice paves the way for higher yields with less fertilizer

[Press-News.org] Does social capital explain community-level differences in organ donor designation?
New study suggests tailoring campaigns to neighborhoods and communities