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Social media and organ donation: Ethically navigating the next frontier
Authors:M. L. Henderson  K. A. Clayville  J. S. Fisher  K. K. Kuntz  H. Mysel  T. S. Purnell  R. L. Schaffer  L. A. Sherman  E. P. Willock  E. J. Gordon
Affiliation:1. Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA;2. St. Mary's College, South Bend, IN, USA;3. Scripps Clinic/Green Hospital, CA, USA;4. The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, Columbus, OH, USA;5. The Living Kidney Donors Network, Chicago, IL, USA;6. Medical College of Wisconsin Milwaukee, WI, USA;7. Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA
Abstract:As the organ shortage continues to grow, the creation of social media communities by transplant hospitals and the public is rapidly expanding to increase the number of living donors. Social media communities are arranged in myriad ways and without standardization, raising concerns about transplant candidates’ and potential donors’ autonomy and quality of care. Social media communities magnify and modify extant ethical issues in deceased and living donation related to privacy, confidentiality, professionalism, and informed consent, and increase the potential for undue influence and coercion for potential donors and transplant candidates. Currently, no national ethical guidelines have been developed in the United States regarding the use of social media to foster organ transplantation. We provide an ethical framework to guide transplant stakeholders in using social media for public and patient communication about transplantation and living donation, and offer recommendations for transplant clinical practice and future research.
Keywords:donors and donation: living  ethics and public policy  internet  organ transplantation  social media
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