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African-American and Caucasian participation in postmortem human brain donation for neuropsychiatric research

Increased African-American research participation is critical to the applicability and generalizability of biomedical research, as population diversity continues to increase both domestically and abroad. Yet numerous studies document historical origins of mistrust, as well as other barriers that may...

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Autores principales: Deep-Soboslay, Amy, Mighdoll, Michelle I., Jaffe, Andrew E., Thomas, Stephen B., Herman, Mary M., Sirovatka, Jonathan, King, Jewell P., Fowler, David R., Zulauf, Dawn, DiAngelo, Constance, Hyde, Thomas M., Kleinman, Joel E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6808324/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31644530
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0222565
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author Deep-Soboslay, Amy
Mighdoll, Michelle I.
Jaffe, Andrew E.
Thomas, Stephen B.
Herman, Mary M.
Sirovatka, Jonathan
King, Jewell P.
Fowler, David R.
Zulauf, Dawn
DiAngelo, Constance
Hyde, Thomas M.
Kleinman, Joel E.
author_facet Deep-Soboslay, Amy
Mighdoll, Michelle I.
Jaffe, Andrew E.
Thomas, Stephen B.
Herman, Mary M.
Sirovatka, Jonathan
King, Jewell P.
Fowler, David R.
Zulauf, Dawn
DiAngelo, Constance
Hyde, Thomas M.
Kleinman, Joel E.
author_sort Deep-Soboslay, Amy
collection PubMed
description Increased African-American research participation is critical to the applicability and generalizability of biomedical research, as population diversity continues to increase both domestically and abroad. Yet numerous studies document historical origins of mistrust, as well as other barriers that may contribute to resistance in the African-American community towards participation in biomedical research. However, a growing body of more recent scientific evidence suggests that African-Americans value research and are willing to participate when asked. In the present study, we set out to determine factors associated with research participation of African-American families in postmortem human brain tissue donation for neuropsychiatric disorders as compared with Caucasian families, from same-day medical examiner autopsy referrals. We retrospectively reviewed brain donation rates, as well as demographic and clinical factors associated with donation in 1,421 consecutive referrals to three medical examiner’s offices from 2010–2015. Overall, 69.7% of all next-of-kin contacted agreed to brain donation. While Caucasian families consented to donate brain tissue at a significantly higher rate (74.1%) than African-American families (57.0%) (p<0.001), African-American brain donation rates were as high as 60.5% in referrals from Maryland. Neither African-American nor Caucasian donors differed significantly from non-donors on any demographic or clinical factors ascertained, including age, sex, diagnosis of the donor, or in the relationship of the next-of-kin being contacted (p>0.05). However, Caucasian donors were significantly older, had more years of education, were more likely to be referred for study due to a psychiatric diagnosis, more likely to have comorbid substance abuse, and more likely to have died via suicide, as compared with African-American donors (p<0.05). When African-American participants are identified and approached, African-American families as well as Caucasian families are indeed willing to donate brain tissue on the spot for neuropsychiatric research, which supports the belief that African-American attitudes towards biomedical research may be more favorable than previously thought.
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spelling pubmed-68083242019-11-02 African-American and Caucasian participation in postmortem human brain donation for neuropsychiatric research Deep-Soboslay, Amy Mighdoll, Michelle I. Jaffe, Andrew E. Thomas, Stephen B. Herman, Mary M. Sirovatka, Jonathan King, Jewell P. Fowler, David R. Zulauf, Dawn DiAngelo, Constance Hyde, Thomas M. Kleinman, Joel E. PLoS One Research Article Increased African-American research participation is critical to the applicability and generalizability of biomedical research, as population diversity continues to increase both domestically and abroad. Yet numerous studies document historical origins of mistrust, as well as other barriers that may contribute to resistance in the African-American community towards participation in biomedical research. However, a growing body of more recent scientific evidence suggests that African-Americans value research and are willing to participate when asked. In the present study, we set out to determine factors associated with research participation of African-American families in postmortem human brain tissue donation for neuropsychiatric disorders as compared with Caucasian families, from same-day medical examiner autopsy referrals. We retrospectively reviewed brain donation rates, as well as demographic and clinical factors associated with donation in 1,421 consecutive referrals to three medical examiner’s offices from 2010–2015. Overall, 69.7% of all next-of-kin contacted agreed to brain donation. While Caucasian families consented to donate brain tissue at a significantly higher rate (74.1%) than African-American families (57.0%) (p<0.001), African-American brain donation rates were as high as 60.5% in referrals from Maryland. Neither African-American nor Caucasian donors differed significantly from non-donors on any demographic or clinical factors ascertained, including age, sex, diagnosis of the donor, or in the relationship of the next-of-kin being contacted (p>0.05). However, Caucasian donors were significantly older, had more years of education, were more likely to be referred for study due to a psychiatric diagnosis, more likely to have comorbid substance abuse, and more likely to have died via suicide, as compared with African-American donors (p<0.05). When African-American participants are identified and approached, African-American families as well as Caucasian families are indeed willing to donate brain tissue on the spot for neuropsychiatric research, which supports the belief that African-American attitudes towards biomedical research may be more favorable than previously thought. Public Library of Science 2019-10-23 /pmc/articles/PMC6808324/ /pubmed/31644530 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0222565 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Deep-Soboslay, Amy
Mighdoll, Michelle I.
Jaffe, Andrew E.
Thomas, Stephen B.
Herman, Mary M.
Sirovatka, Jonathan
King, Jewell P.
Fowler, David R.
Zulauf, Dawn
DiAngelo, Constance
Hyde, Thomas M.
Kleinman, Joel E.
African-American and Caucasian participation in postmortem human brain donation for neuropsychiatric research
title African-American and Caucasian participation in postmortem human brain donation for neuropsychiatric research
title_full African-American and Caucasian participation in postmortem human brain donation for neuropsychiatric research
title_fullStr African-American and Caucasian participation in postmortem human brain donation for neuropsychiatric research
title_full_unstemmed African-American and Caucasian participation in postmortem human brain donation for neuropsychiatric research
title_short African-American and Caucasian participation in postmortem human brain donation for neuropsychiatric research
title_sort african-american and caucasian participation in postmortem human brain donation for neuropsychiatric research
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6808324/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31644530
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0222565
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