Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT02318849 |
Other study ID # |
R39OT26993 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
November 1, 2014 |
Est. completion date |
December 31, 2018 |
Study information
Verified date |
May 2023 |
Source |
University of Hawaii |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Taking advantage of college students' frequent use of online technology, including social
networking sites (e.g., Instagram a social media site /Facebook a social networking site) and
social media sites (e.g., YouTube), the investigators will create an online intervention that
leverages this technology to engage and educate Asian, Native Hawaiian, Pacific Islanders
(ANHPI)students about a range of topics related to organ donation following death.
Description:
Over 56% of the 120,000 critically ill Americans waiting on transplant waiting lists are
ethnic minorities. The proportion of ethnic minorities, including Asian, Native Hawaiian,
Pacific Islanders (ANHPI), on waiting lists exceeds their representation in the general
population. However, few ANHPI adults are designated organ donors (DOD) on their driver's
licenses or in a donor registry. ANHPI college students (aged 18-29) also have low DOD rates,
particularly Filipinos. Individuals are typically asked about becoming a DOD when renewing a
driver's license; but most never think about OD outside of the short-lived Department of
Motor Vehicles (DMV) transaction. Knowing someone's status as a DOD on their license can be
an influential factor in solidifying a family's feelings about donating a relative's organs
after his/her death, if their consent is necessary. Of those who choose DOD status on a
license, most will remain one for life. Intervening with drivers before the date of their
license renewal can be difficult to arrange; however, opportunities arise when college
students turn 21 and want to renew their license in order to remove formatting / colors
signifying that the license belongs to an underage minor (< 21 years old).
Taking advantage of college students' frequent use of online technology, including social
networking sites (e.g., Instagram a social media site /Facebook a social networking site) and
social media sites (e.g., YouTube), the investigators created an online intervention that
leveraged this technology to engage and educate ANHPI students about a range of topics
related to organ donation (OD). It will also provide culturally sensitive messages tailored
to their interest in or wariness of organ donation and reframe students' attitudes about OD
and becoming a DOD. Previous internet interventions to encourage college students to become
DODs have not included culturally sensitive approaches for ANHPI, who have unique barriers to
OD. The cross-sectional design will test the impact of introducing, sequentially, an online
intervention tailored to college students at three universities (UH-Manoa, UH-Hilo, and
Hawaii Pacific University). The sequence of when the a university received the intervention
was randomly determined; thus, the study's design was a cross-sectional design. The goal was
to increase DOD rates in college students, particularly ANHPI and encouraging peer
discussions/interactions/advocacy about OD.
Effectiveness will be measured by a change over time in the percentage of students who report
being a DOD on their license/donor registry (250 students per university measured across 6
time points; thus, the total sample = 4,500). The investigators anticipate a 12% increase in
DOD rate in students who are exposed to the intervention. Increases in DOD status will also
be tracked via an increase (over normal rates) in the number of new donors aged 18-29 who
register as a donor on Hawaii's online donor registry. To make the study website relevant to
college students the investigators will include resources useful for assignments in courses
(e.g., both in required "general education" courses- including one on "writing skills", and
courses on ethics, religion, sociology, and culture/ ethnic studies, etc.) Students and
student organizations will participate in contests to win prizes (e.g., for the best 1-minute
DOD focused-YouTube video/ Instagram picture, creating a "caption" for a photo on Instagram,
and student organizations who compete for group awards). A goal of the intervention will be
to reframe OD by engaging altruistic attitudes based on college students' commitment to
"green" sustainability efforts (e.g., "go green, recycle yourself"). Innovative culturally
sensitive strategies that can engage, educate, and reframe DOD for college students,
including those who find it unappealing (i.e., the "ick factor") are clearly needed. The
online intervention will saturate online venues (i.e., YouTube, Instagram) visited frequently
by college students, and the investigators will use the new concept of "gamification" to turn
college students' learning and advocacy ideas surrounding OD/DOD into a game or contest with
their peers. This project builds upon Drs. Albright and Feeley's (consultant - Univ. of
Buffalo, Dept. of Communications) previous work to encourage adolescents and young adults to
become a DOD; thus, the investigators feel well-suited to design, implement, and evaluate the
proposed project. The intervention will increase DOD rates in ANHPI students, and thus,
increase the number of ethnic minorities who become deceased organ donors now and for years
to come.