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2005 National Survey of Organ and Tissue Donation Attitudes and Behaviors

     
2005 National Survey
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Table of Contents
Executive Summary
Introduction
Survey Methods
Findings
Organ Donation Attitudes
Organ Donation Behaviors
Living Donation
Attitudes Toward Presumed Consent
Attitudes Toward Financial Issues
Beliefs About Organ and Tissue Donation
Sources of Information About Organ and Tissue Donation
References
Appendix. Questionnaire
Copyright Standards
 

2.0 Survey Methods

In the summer and fall of 2005, Gallup completed nearly 2,500 interviews with people in U.S. households. Random digit dialing was used to identify adults aged 18 and older. Telephone exchanges were sampled in U.S. households and were oversampled in geographic areas with concentrations of racial and ethnic minorities. This sampling approach divided the United States into the following strata:

Black or African American oversample
Hispanic or Latino oversample
Asian oversample
Remainder of the United States

Interviewing was done in Spanish and Mandarin for those who preferred either language to English. Professional interviewers called in the afternoons and evenings, and on weekdays and weekends to try to find individuals at home at the sampled numbers. Interviewers made up to seven calls to make a contact and screen individuals in the household for eligibility. Interviewers also made up to seven calls to complete the interviews.

The questionnaire is found in Appendix A. The topics covered included the following:

  • General support for donation
  • Granting permission to donate
  • Willingness to donate
  • Support for living organ donation
  • Attitudes toward presumed consent
  • Attitudes toward financial incentives
  • Attitudinal drivers of organ donation
  • Sources of information about organ donation

The sample was weighted to adjust for the racial and ethnic oversampling, number of residential telephone numbers in the household, and number of adults living in the household. The sample was further weighted to meet the sex and race/ethnicity distribution of the United States. These weights were applied to all analyses in this report.

Table 1 shows the weighted and unweighted distribution of demographic variables. The variables included gender, age, race/ethnicity, and education. The table clearly illustrates the oversampling of Blacks, Hispanics, and Asians and how their numbers are discounted somewhat in the weighting to provide a balanced estimate when race/ethnic categories are combined.

Table 1. Sample Characteristics: Unweighted and Weighted

Demographic Characteristic

Unweighted

Weighted

Number

Percent

Number

Percent

Gender

Male

848

36.2

905

43.1

Female

1,493

63.8

1,194

56.9

Age

18-24 years

205

8.8

178

8.6

25-34 years

364

15.7

295

14.2

25-44 years

494

21.3

451

21.7

45-54 years

511

22.1

442

21.3

55-64 years

386

16.7

372

17.9

65 + years

357

15.4

340

16.3

Race/Ethnicity

Black/African-American

506

21.7

269

12.9

Hispanic/Latino

540

23.1

307

14.7

Asian

213

9.1

92

4.4

White

1,009

43.2

1,364

65.3

Other race

8

0.3

21

1.0

Multiple races

60

2.6

35

1.7

Education

Less than high school graduate

155

6.6

98

4.7

High school graduate

499

21.4

433

20.7

Some college

616

26.4

580

27.7

Trade/ Technical/Vocational

114

4.9

99

4.7

College graduate

562

24.1

502

24.0

Post graduate work/degree

387

16.6

380

18.2

Some of the items used in the survey questionnaire for this study are proprietary content owned by The Gallup Organization. A complete list is found on the Copyright page. Copyright © 1993, 2005 The Gallup Organization, Washington, D.C. All rights reserved.

US Department of Health & Human Services