Family Decision Making

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The Experts below are selected from a list of 225 Experts worldwide ranked by ideXlab platform

Jose Manuel Perez Martin - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • organ donation and Family Decision Making within the spanish donation system
    Social Science & Medicine, 2001
    Co-Authors: Jose M Martinez, Jorge Lopez, Antonio Martin, Maria J Martin, Barbara Scandroglio, Jose Manuel Perez Martin
    Abstract:

    This study analyses the variables associated with the Decisions made by families of potential organ donors to give or deny consent for the extraction of organs. Different indicators were recorded in 68 cases of Family interview for petition of consent carried out in 13 Spanish hospitals. Those variables showing the strongest relation with Family Decision (donation/refusal of consent) are knowledge shown by the Family about the deceased's wishes with regard to donation (p

  • organ donation and Family Decision Making within the spanish donation system
    Social Science & Medicine, 2001
    Co-Authors: Jose M Martinez, Jorge Lopez, Antonio Martin, Maria J Martin, Barbara Scandroglio, Jose Manuel Perez Martin
    Abstract:

    This study analyses the variables associated with the Decisions made by families of potential organ donors to give or deny consent for the extraction of organs. Different indicators were recorded in 68 cases of Family interview for petition of consent carried out in 13 Spanish hospitals. Those variables showing the strongest relation with Family Decision (donation/refusal of consent) are knowledge shown by the Family about the deceased's wishes with regard to donation (p<0.001), Family relationship climate (p<0.01), expression of Family's satisfaction level with medical attention received (p<0.01) and number of relatives present at the consent request interview (p<0.01). Logistic regression on Family Decision with considered variables correctly predicted relatives' final choice in 98.4% of cases. In turn, multivariate exploratory analysis highlights a potential association between the expression of the deceased's wishes and several concurrent variables in the process (satisfaction with personal treatment and medical attention received, emotional reactions in the interviews of notification of death and consent request). It also shows that patterns of reaction and Family participation in this process may vary according to the sex of the deceased relative. Results suggest that both educational efforts devoted to promoting a positive attitude toward donation in the general population and the training of health professionals involved in the generation of organs may be key factors in reducing organ shortage.

Jose M Martinez - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • organ donation and Family Decision Making within the spanish donation system
    Social Science & Medicine, 2001
    Co-Authors: Jose M Martinez, Jorge Lopez, Antonio Martin, Maria J Martin, Barbara Scandroglio, Jose Manuel Perez Martin
    Abstract:

    This study analyses the variables associated with the Decisions made by families of potential organ donors to give or deny consent for the extraction of organs. Different indicators were recorded in 68 cases of Family interview for petition of consent carried out in 13 Spanish hospitals. Those variables showing the strongest relation with Family Decision (donation/refusal of consent) are knowledge shown by the Family about the deceased's wishes with regard to donation (p

  • organ donation and Family Decision Making within the spanish donation system
    Social Science & Medicine, 2001
    Co-Authors: Jose M Martinez, Jorge Lopez, Antonio Martin, Maria J Martin, Barbara Scandroglio, Jose Manuel Perez Martin
    Abstract:

    This study analyses the variables associated with the Decisions made by families of potential organ donors to give or deny consent for the extraction of organs. Different indicators were recorded in 68 cases of Family interview for petition of consent carried out in 13 Spanish hospitals. Those variables showing the strongest relation with Family Decision (donation/refusal of consent) are knowledge shown by the Family about the deceased's wishes with regard to donation (p<0.001), Family relationship climate (p<0.01), expression of Family's satisfaction level with medical attention received (p<0.01) and number of relatives present at the consent request interview (p<0.01). Logistic regression on Family Decision with considered variables correctly predicted relatives' final choice in 98.4% of cases. In turn, multivariate exploratory analysis highlights a potential association between the expression of the deceased's wishes and several concurrent variables in the process (satisfaction with personal treatment and medical attention received, emotional reactions in the interviews of notification of death and consent request). It also shows that patterns of reaction and Family participation in this process may vary according to the sex of the deceased relative. Results suggest that both educational efforts devoted to promoting a positive attitude toward donation in the general population and the training of health professionals involved in the generation of organs may be key factors in reducing organ shortage.

Michael E Lamb - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • determinants of non paid task division in gay lesbian and heterosexual parent families with infants conceived using artificial reproductive techniques
    Frontiers in Psychology, 2020
    Co-Authors: Loes Van Rijnvan Gelderen, Kate Ellisdavies, Marijke Huijzerengbrenghof, Terrence D Jorgensen, Martine Gross, Alice Winstanley, Berengere Rubio, Olivier Vecho, Michael E Lamb
    Abstract:

    Background: The division of non-paid labor in heterosexual parents in the West is usually still gender-based, with mothers taking on the majority of direct caregiving responsibilities. However, in same-sex couples, gender cannot be the deciding factor. Inspired by Feinberg’s ecological model of co-parenting, this study investigated whether infant temperament, parent factors (biological relatedness to child, psychological adjustment, parenting stress, and work status), and partner relationship quality explained how first-time gay, lesbian, and heterosexual parents divided labor (childcare and Family Decision-Making) when their infants were four months and 12 months old. We also tested whether Family type acted as a moderator. Method: Participants were drawn from [MASKED FOR REVIEW]. Only those who provided information about their biological relatedness (yes or no) to their child (N = 263 parents) were included. When infants were four months (T1), parents completed a password-protected online questionnaire exploring their demographic characteristics including work status and standardized online-questionnaires on task division (childcare and Family Decision-Making), infant temperament, parental anxiety, parental depression, parental stress, and partner relationship satisfaction. When infants were 12-months-old (T2), parents provided information about task division and their biological relatedness to their children. Results: Linear mixed models showed that no factor explained the division of Family Decision Making at T1 and T2. For relative time spent on childcare tasks at T1, biological relatedness mattered for lesbian mothers only: biologically related mothers appeared to spend more time on childcare tasks than did non-related mothers. Results showed that, regardless of Family type, parents who were not working or were working part-time at T1 performed more childcare tasks at T1. This was still true at T2. The other factors did not significantly contribute to relative time spent on childcare tasks at T2. Conclusion: We had the opportunity to analyze the division of non-paid tasks in families where parenting was necessarily planned and in which gender could not affect that division. Although Feinberg’s model of co-parenting suggests that various factors are related to task division, we found that paid work outside the home was most important during the first year of parenthood in determining caregiving roles.

Antonio Martin - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • organ donation and Family Decision Making within the spanish donation system
    Social Science & Medicine, 2001
    Co-Authors: Jose M Martinez, Jorge Lopez, Antonio Martin, Maria J Martin, Barbara Scandroglio, Jose Manuel Perez Martin
    Abstract:

    This study analyses the variables associated with the Decisions made by families of potential organ donors to give or deny consent for the extraction of organs. Different indicators were recorded in 68 cases of Family interview for petition of consent carried out in 13 Spanish hospitals. Those variables showing the strongest relation with Family Decision (donation/refusal of consent) are knowledge shown by the Family about the deceased's wishes with regard to donation (p

  • organ donation and Family Decision Making within the spanish donation system
    Social Science & Medicine, 2001
    Co-Authors: Jose M Martinez, Jorge Lopez, Antonio Martin, Maria J Martin, Barbara Scandroglio, Jose Manuel Perez Martin
    Abstract:

    This study analyses the variables associated with the Decisions made by families of potential organ donors to give or deny consent for the extraction of organs. Different indicators were recorded in 68 cases of Family interview for petition of consent carried out in 13 Spanish hospitals. Those variables showing the strongest relation with Family Decision (donation/refusal of consent) are knowledge shown by the Family about the deceased's wishes with regard to donation (p<0.001), Family relationship climate (p<0.01), expression of Family's satisfaction level with medical attention received (p<0.01) and number of relatives present at the consent request interview (p<0.01). Logistic regression on Family Decision with considered variables correctly predicted relatives' final choice in 98.4% of cases. In turn, multivariate exploratory analysis highlights a potential association between the expression of the deceased's wishes and several concurrent variables in the process (satisfaction with personal treatment and medical attention received, emotional reactions in the interviews of notification of death and consent request). It also shows that patterns of reaction and Family participation in this process may vary according to the sex of the deceased relative. Results suggest that both educational efforts devoted to promoting a positive attitude toward donation in the general population and the training of health professionals involved in the generation of organs may be key factors in reducing organ shortage.

Jorge Lopez - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • organ donation and Family Decision Making within the spanish donation system
    Social Science & Medicine, 2001
    Co-Authors: Jose M Martinez, Jorge Lopez, Antonio Martin, Maria J Martin, Barbara Scandroglio, Jose Manuel Perez Martin
    Abstract:

    This study analyses the variables associated with the Decisions made by families of potential organ donors to give or deny consent for the extraction of organs. Different indicators were recorded in 68 cases of Family interview for petition of consent carried out in 13 Spanish hospitals. Those variables showing the strongest relation with Family Decision (donation/refusal of consent) are knowledge shown by the Family about the deceased's wishes with regard to donation (p

  • organ donation and Family Decision Making within the spanish donation system
    Social Science & Medicine, 2001
    Co-Authors: Jose M Martinez, Jorge Lopez, Antonio Martin, Maria J Martin, Barbara Scandroglio, Jose Manuel Perez Martin
    Abstract:

    This study analyses the variables associated with the Decisions made by families of potential organ donors to give or deny consent for the extraction of organs. Different indicators were recorded in 68 cases of Family interview for petition of consent carried out in 13 Spanish hospitals. Those variables showing the strongest relation with Family Decision (donation/refusal of consent) are knowledge shown by the Family about the deceased's wishes with regard to donation (p<0.001), Family relationship climate (p<0.01), expression of Family's satisfaction level with medical attention received (p<0.01) and number of relatives present at the consent request interview (p<0.01). Logistic regression on Family Decision with considered variables correctly predicted relatives' final choice in 98.4% of cases. In turn, multivariate exploratory analysis highlights a potential association between the expression of the deceased's wishes and several concurrent variables in the process (satisfaction with personal treatment and medical attention received, emotional reactions in the interviews of notification of death and consent request). It also shows that patterns of reaction and Family participation in this process may vary according to the sex of the deceased relative. Results suggest that both educational efforts devoted to promoting a positive attitude toward donation in the general population and the training of health professionals involved in the generation of organs may be key factors in reducing organ shortage.