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African Americans are the largest group of minorities in need of organ transplants

By Nathan Turner Jr., birminghamtimes.com

Angela Johnson of Pell City is among the fortunate ones.

The mother of two started receiving dialysis treatments in 2009, as her kidneys deteriorated. The blood-cleansing sessions were done three days a week, and each lasted several hours. But she was able to resume a normal life in 2013, after receiving a donor kidney that freed her from dialysis.

“[The transplant] gave me a second chance at life,” said Johnson, 46, who works as a sales associate at the Outlet Shops of Grand River in Leeds.

Many African-Americans are on waiting lists for kidneys, hearts, and other organs — and often not as fortunate as Johnson.

While the number of blacks receiving donations has increased in recent years, there “is still a way to go” to meet the needs for organ requests in the community, according to medical professionals.

African-Americans are the largest group of minorities in need of organ transplantation. Blacks make up 13 percent of the U.S. population; of those awaiting organ donations, 34 percent are waiting for kidneys and 25 percent for hearts.

Other statistics of note:

More than 30 percent of U.S. patients awaiting kidney donations are African-American, while half are minorities in general.
In 2012, 29 percent of the total candidates waiting for transplants in the U.S. were African-American, but they comprised only 14 percent of organ donors that year; 69 percent of donor organs from African-Americans were from deceased donors.
“African-Americans are much less likely to find a living kidney donor because of a prevalence of comorbidity issues, such as diabetes and high blood pressure, in the community,” said Dr. Jayme Locke, who, along with Dr. Michael Hanaway led the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) team that handled Johnson’s transplant. “These issues make [potential donors] less medically suitable.”

At least 22 people in the U.S. die daily awaiting organ transplants, according to the White House, which has launched a campaign to reduce the long waiting lists for those in needs of hearts, kidneys, livers, and other tissue.

A number of groups aim to increase minority donors and reduce the waiting lists through health promotion, disease prevention, and face-to-face interactions with members of the black community.

Patrice Miles, project director of the National Minority Organ Tissue Transplant Education Program (MOTTEP) in Washington D.C., has one such group.

“The message is received better” with in-person educational visits, Miles said, “… people begin to see that you are not coming to take their organs when you ask them about signing donor cards, but that you actually care about them.”

Skepticism

There are other reasons why many African-Americans are hesitant to donate organs, according to medical experts: religious objections; skepticism about proper care during surgery; lack of renal disease and transplantation awareness.

UAB’s Locke also cited the effects of the Tuskegee Syphilis Study, which “has had a horrible and profound, long-lasting effect. On a continuum, it moved many African-Americans over from trust to mistrust,” said Locke, who is an associate professor of surgery at UAB and director of the university’s Incompatible Kidney Transplant Program.

The medical community must earn the trust of African-Americans again, she said.

Organ Transplants

According a U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Office of Minority Health report, the number of organ transplants performed on black Americans in 2012 was only 14 percent of the number of blacks waiting for a transplant; the number of transplants performed on white Americans was 27 percent of the number waiting.

Although the total number of white Americans on organ transplant waiting lists is about 1.5 times greater than that of black Americans, the report continues, the number of candidates waiting for a kidney transplant is almost the same between blacks and whites.

In addition, research shows that 25 percent of people waiting for heart donations are black, according to the HHS.

Read more at http://www.birminghamtimes.com/2016/07/african-americans-the-largest-group-of-minorities-in-need-of-organ-transplants/

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