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TV news
on organ donation says little about need,
how to become a donor
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — More than 100,000 people
in the U.S. are waiting for an organ
transplant, and an average of 17 die waiting
each day, according to University of
Illinois
communication professor Brian
Quick.
But you’ll rarely hear those facts in organ
donation stories on TV network news, says
Quick, the lead author of a study published
this month in the journal Health
Communication.
You’ll also rarely hear about the simple
steps required to become a potential donor,
he said.
“We found that the networks didn’t spend a
whole lot of time talking about the need,
and they didn’t spend a lot of time talking
about how to register,” Quick said.
Quick and his co-authors on the study drew
from ABC, CBS and NBC news transcripts that
were available through the LexisNexis media
database, covering the period 1990 to 2005.
The transcripts came from dozens of
different news programs, including morning,
evening and magazine shows.
(NBC transcripts were not available from
LexisNexis for broadcasts before 1995, and
Quick said it was difficult to know what
programs or specific broadcasts from any of
the three networks might have transcripts
missing from the database.)
Three students were trained as research
coders to analyze the organ donation
stories, once they were identified.
Over the period studied, the researchers
found 1,507 stories involving organ
donation, or about 100 a year, a number they
labeled as “modest coverage.”
Of the 201 stories that mentioned health
outcomes for living organ donors, 189 (or 94
percent) were positive, compared with 12
stories about unsuccessful donor outcomes.
Of the 755 stories that mentioned health
outcomes for organ recipients, 617 (81.7
percent) were positive, compared to 138
about negative outcomes.
Less than 15 percent of all stories,
however, noted the large number of people
waiting for an organ, and most illustrated
that need through narrative rather than
statistics, Quick said. Less than 5 percent
of stories specified the number of
individuals who die waiting for an organ
transplant.
Also, less than 10 percent of stories
indicated how to become a potential donor:
by signing a donor card, talking to one’s
family, signing the back of a driver’s
license, or registering through a Web site.
These numbers are a concern, Quick said,
because “you’ve got to communicate the need
before people are going to be motivated to
become potential donors, and then they have
to know how.”
Quick said he was motivated to research the
topic – and sign up early as a potential
donor himself – based in large part on his
own experience.
“I’ve been on the receiving end twice,” he
said, since his father has received
transplants of both a kidney and pancreas,
the first coming while Quick was still in
high school.
Even though he’s experienced the benefits,
however, he understands why many are
hesitant to discuss the topic with family or
to register as potential donors.
To sign up as a potential donor means
contemplating your own death, as well as
concerns about disfigurement, he said.
The results of the TV news study have
implications for those advocating organ
donation and designing campaigns to promote
it, Quick said.
The results are especially important, he
said, because research suggests that TV is
the primary source of information about
organ donation.
Research also shows that entertainment
programs, such as medical shows in search of
a compelling storyline, often reinforce
common “fears and myths” about organ
donation, he said.
“The news has a good opportunity to
communicate the facts,” Quick said.
“We need to continue to reinforce the
positive because we are competing with
Hollywood, which is really tough.”
Co-authors of the study were Do Kyun Kim and
Kevin Meyer, both graduate students at Ohio
University at the time of the research.
Kim is now a professor at the University of
Louisiana at Lafayette; Meyer soon will be a
professor at Illinois State University.
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