@article {HortonE348, author = {Anna Horton and Peter Nugus and Marie-Chantal Fortin and David Landsberg and Marcelo Cantarovich and Shaifali Sandal}, title = {Health system barriers and facilitators to living donor kidney transplantation: a qualitative case study in British Columbia}, volume = {10}, number = {2}, pages = {E348--E356}, year = {2022}, doi = {10.9778/cmajo.20210049}, publisher = {Canadian Medical Association Open Access Journal}, abstract = {Background: In patients with kidney failure, living donor kidney transplantation (LDKT) is the best treatment option; yet, LDKT rates have stagnated in Canada and vary widely across provinces. We aimed to identify barriers and facilitators to LDKT in a high-performing health system.Methods: This study was conducted using a qualitative exploratory case study of British Columbia. Data collection, conducted between October 2020 and January 2021, entailed document review and semistructured interviews with key stakeholders, including provincial leadership, care teams and patients. We recruited participants via purposive sampling and snowballing technique. We generated themes using thematic analysis.Results: After analysis of interviews conducted with 22 participants (5 representatives from provincial organizations, 7 health care providers at transplant centres, 8 health care providers from regional units and 2 patients) and document review, we identified the following 5 themes as facilitators to LDKT: a centralized infrastructure, a mandate for timely intervention, an equitable funding model, a commitment to collaboration and cultivating distributed expertise. The relationship between 2 provincial organizations (BC Transplant and BC Renal Agency) was identified as key to enabling the mandate and processes for LDKT. Five barriers were identified that arose from silos between provincial organizations and manifested as inconsistencies in coordinating LDKT along the spectrum of care. These were divided accountability structures, disconnected care processes, missed training opportunities, inequitable access by region and financial burden for donors and recipients.Interpretation: We found strong links between provincial infrastructure and the processes that facilitate or impede timely intervention and referral of patients for LDKT. Our findings have implications for policy-makers and provide opportunities for cross-jurisdictional comparative analyses.}, URL = {https://www.cmajopen.ca/content/10/2/E348}, eprint = {https://www.cmajopen.ca/content/10/2/E348.full.pdf}, journal = {Canadian Medical Association Open Access Journal} }