On willingness to be a bone marrow donor
- 8 July 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Transfusion
- Vol. 26 (4), 324-330
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1537-2995.1986.26486262738.x
Abstract
The authors studied factors that may influence the willingness of apheresis donors to consider bone marrow donation to an unrelated recipient. Donors were sent questionnaires describing bone marrow transplantation and the role of the donor. The information about degree of risk to the donor was varied from low to high risk. Two other factors that might influence donor motivation also were presented: probability of actually being asked to participate (high or low), and "salience of responsibility," which defines the stress to donate based on the number of persons being asked (large or small group). The degree of risk presented strongly affected willingness to volunteer, but the two motivation factors had no effect. The factor of risk negatively affected women more than men, and negatively affected those with family responsibilities more than single donors. Other findings were: 1) men were more willing then women to donate marrow; 2) those with few donations were among the most willing; and 3) those who knew others who had either needed or provided blood products were also among the most willing.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Resilience in the Face of Catastrophe: Optimism, Personality, and Coping in the Kosovo CrisisJournal of Applied Social Psychology, 2002
- Elicitation of moral obligation and self-sacrificing behavior: An experimental study of volunteering to be a bone marrow donor.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1970