Wiedebusch S, Reiermann S, Steinke C, Muthny FA, Pavenstaedt HJ, Schoene-Seifert B, Senninger N, Suwelack B, Buyx AM
Research article (journal) | Peer reviewedThe main aim of the study was to explore well-being after donation. This retrospective, cross-sectional study of 161 living kidney donors (104 women; response rate 81.4%) who were aged between 32 and 80 years (x = 56.3; standard deviation = 10.9) included responses to standardized questionnaires concerning quality of life (QOL), coping, and mental health status. Most donors recovered fully from donation within 6 months (90.8%). Donor willingness to donate again (96.1%) was high. Their relationship to the recipient did not change (67.9%) or even improved (27.5%) in most cases. Donor QOL (as assessed by the Short-Form [SF]-36) did not differ from healthy norms. In 25% of donors, screening with the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale revealed anxious and/or depressive symptoms above the clinical cutoff score. Donor predominant coping style with their recipient's renal disease was "active problem-focused coping." The component scores of the SF-36 correlated positively with sociodemographic and self-reported medical parameters, coping, and mental health status. Although living kidney donation again proved to be a treatment without negative impact on donor QOL, the results underlined the importance of screening for donor mental health status and coping both in the evaluation process and after the procedure.
| Muthny, Fritz | Institute of Medical Psychology and Neuro Science (IMPS) |
| Pavenstädt, Hermann-Joseph | Medical Clinic of Internal Medicine D (Nephrology and Rheumatology) (Med D) |
| Reiermann, Stefanie | Medical Clinic of Internal Medicine D (Nephrology and Rheumatology) (Med D) |
| Schöne-Seifert, Bettina | Institute of Ethics, History and Theory of Medicine |
| Senninger, Norbert | General Surgery Clinic |
| Suwelack, Barbara Maria | Medical Clinic of Internal Medicine D (Nephrology and Rheumatology) (Med D) |