Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

This study will test the effectiveness of a multimedia campaign to educate ethnic minority teens about the choice to become a designated organ donor on their first driver's license.


Clinical Trial Description

Less than a fourth of ethnic minority teens in the U.S. are a designated donor (DD) on their state-issued driver's license. Asian-American/Pacific Islander (AA/PI) adolescents in Hawaii are even less likely to be a DD or to have talked to their family about becoming an organ donor. Health education interventions for adolescents have demonstrated improvements in knowledge and intentions to be an organ donor; but, AA/PI teens are underrepresented in such studies. Nevertheless, whether changes in knowledge or intentions result in more organ donors is unclear, since previous studies have not included a concrete behavioral outcome such as the teen becoming a donor on their driver's license. This application will test, via a randomized clinical trial, the efficacy of an Interactive Multimedia Intervention (IMI) to increase the number of AA/PI adolescents who are a DD on their state issued driver's license, identification card, or organ donor card/donor registry. Teen groups will be recruited from the community (churches and high schools, n = 40 groups, 530 teens) and randomly assigned to either the intervention or a comparison condition on prevention of underage drinking of alcohol. The theoretically-derived intervention will include culturally sensitive messages and information about being a designated donor that will be delivered via a DVD, Email, text/instant messaging, and websites. The comparison condition includes materials (DVD) previously shown to increase awareness about laws restricting access to alcohol by teens. The primary outcome is objectively validated donor status on a teens' driver's license/state identification card (ID) or donor card after 12 months of intervention. A secondary outcome is the reported rate of family discussions about organ donation and knowledge/intentions about donation. We hypothesize the youth groups assigned to the intervention will have higher rates for family discussions and DD status, compared to groups in the comparison condition. We will also test whether psychosocial and cultural factors act as mediators of any change in teens' knowledge, attitudes & stages of change to become a DD. After the randomized trial we will disseminate the intervention to Organ Procurement Organizations in Hawaii and other states, and track diffusion outcomes over a year. If IMI methods can increase the number of minority teens who become a DD on their driver's license by 10% this would translate to 500,000 more teenage designated donors in the U.S. ;


Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Investigator), Primary Purpose: Prevention


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT00810901
Study type Interventional
Source University of Hawaii
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date April 2008
Completion date December 2014

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Active, not recruiting NCT05041023 - Experience of Relatives and Intensive Care Units Caregivers of Controlled Donation After Circulatory Death
Terminated NCT02585921 - Organ Donation Interventions Among High Students N/A
Completed NCT02318849 - Online Intervention for ANHPI College Students N/A
Terminated NCT01214018 - Evaluation of Post-traumatic Stress Among the Nearest Relatives of Brain-dead Organ Donors N/A
Completed NCT01922310 - Communication Regarding Organ and Tissue Donation in Intensive Care N/A
Completed NCT01213069 - Staff Opinions and Knowledge Concerning Organ and Tissue Harvesting: an Investigation Among the Patient Care Personnel in the South-Mediterranean Region of France N/A
Completed NCT00870506 - Community Trial to Enhance Organ Donation N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT02430961 - Predictors of Apnea and Prediction of Time to Death in Donation After Cardiac Death N/A
Completed NCT04123275 - Prediction on Time to Death in Potential Controlled Donation After Circulatory Death (cDCD) Donors (DCD III Study)
Completed NCT04131140 - Organ Donation and End-of-life Decisions
Recruiting NCT03458052 - Organ Donation Survey Among Health Care Professionals in Argentina N/A