Résultats du Concours 2023 de subventions pour l’innovation en recherche du PRDTC
Le PRDTC est ravi d’annoncer les résultats du Concours 2023 de subventions pour l’innovation en recherche, rendu possible grâce à des partenariats avec diverses organisations. Nous sommes fiers de présenter tous les projets innovants qui ont été financés dans le cadre du concours de cette année.
Nous tenons à féliciter chaleureusement le Dr Jagbir Gill et son équipe pour avoir reçu la bourse Transplant Research Foundation of BC/CDTRP Venture. Nous leur souhaitons tout le succès possible dans la réalisation de leur projet novateur !
« Transplant Research Foundation of BC est ravie de soutenir une recherche d’une telle ampleur et d’une telle profondeur qui mènera à d’importantes nouvelles découvertes qui transformeront véritablement le don et la transplantation d’organes en Colombie-Britannique et au Canada. »
– Elaine Yong, co-responsable TRFBC
Bourse Transplant Research Foundation of BC/CDTRP Venture : Dr Jagbir Gill
A unique reciprocity-based strategy to improve living kidney donations in British Columbia: Focus group consultations
- Affiliation principale : Université de Colombie-Britannique
- Thème 1 – Améliorer la culture du don
Résumé (en anglais)
Despite the tremendous benefits of kidney transplantation, the demand for transplantation far exceeds the availability of organ donors in Canada, meaning patients have to wait years on dialysis before receiving a deceased donor kidney transplant (DDKT). Deceased donor rates have not changed since 2020. Further, there are limited living kidney donors in Canada and the numbers continue to stagnate. One of the things that limits potential living donors is the concern that someone they know, or love may need a kidney in the future and if they donate now they won’t be able to help other family members.
In this project, we aim to explore the acceptability of policy in which living kidney donors would be able to identify someone who could receive a priority for a DDKT if they need it. As this would have important implications it is important to understand whether such a policy is acceptable to key stakeholders.
We will conduct focus group consultations with patients that are on the waitlist and those that have already been transplanted, living kidney donors, and general community members to explore the acceptability of reciprocity-based strategy. The results will be analyzed and reviewed with the key knowledge users and stakeholders, and policy briefs and reports will be developed to directly inform the development and implementation of reciprocity-based strategy in British Columbia.