| 13 Juin 2013
Organ  donation rates in the United States have remained static while  increasing numbers of individuals join transplant waiting lists each  year. To provide organs to the more than 100,000 patients in need, new  efforts to boost organ donation through public education are clearly  needed.  Andrew  Cameron, MD, PhD, of The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in  Baltimore, and his colleagues wondered whether social media  could be used to reach more of the population and motivate them to  become donors upon their death. Collaborating with Facebook, the  Timeline platform on the  social media site was altered to let users change their profile status  to indicate “organ donor.” When they did so, they were given a link to  their official  state donor registry, and a message was sent to their friends informing  them of their new status. Their friends then had the opportunity to  change their own  status as well and to keep the message going.  When  the investigators looked at the online registration activity in state  registries for the weeks following Facebook’s organ donor  initiative, they saw a large spike in donor registration in all states.  On the first day of the initiative, there were 13,054 new online  registrations,  representing a 21.1-fold increase over the baseline average of 616  registrations. This first-day effect ranged from 6.9-fold in Michigan to  108.9-fold in  Georgia. Registration rates remained elevated in the following 12 days.  “Our  research speaks to on-going efforts to address the organ availability  crisis in the United States. It also suggests that social media  and social networks may be valuable tools in re-approaching refractory  public health problems,” said Dr. Cameron.  “However, the bump we saw  did diminish  over weeks, implying that more work is needed to assure sustainability  or ‘virality’ in this case.” He added that the long-term significance of  this work  will be realized only when the use of social media and social networks  is examined in terms of its impact on the nation’s organ supply. 
A new social media initiative helped to boost organ donor registration rates, according to a new study published in the American Journal of Transplantation.  The findings suggest that social media  might be an effective tool for tackling a variety of problems related to  public health in which communication and education are essential. 









