I WOULD DONATE, BUT OTHERS WON’T FOLLOW: THE IMPACT OF PRESUMED CONSENT FOR ORGAN DONATION ON PREFERENCES AND PERCEIVED DESCRIPTIVE SOCIAL NORMS IN SERBIA

JA BIH DONIRAO/LA, ALI DRUGI NEĆE: UTICAJ PRETPOSTAVLJENE SAGLASNOSTI ZA DONIRANJE ORGANA NA PREFERENCIJE I PERCEPCIJE DESKRIPTIVNIH DRUŠTVENIH NORMI U SRBIJI

Authors

  • Aleksandar Ninkov Faculty for Economics, Finance and Administration, Belgrade Metropolitan University

Keywords:

Opt-out default, organ donation, presumed consent, descriptive social norms, nudge, pluralistic ignorance

Abstract

The study examined organ donation preferences and perceived descriptive social norms under presumed consent for organ donation, a public policy proposed to address low organ donation rates in Serbia. Conducted as an online between-subjects experiment with students in Serbia, the research included two hypothetical organ donation conditions: opt-in (explicit consent) and opt-out (presumed consent). The opt-out default significantly increased willingness to donate but did not affect assumptions about others' preferences under the same default. This finding suggests that perceived descriptive social norms may hinder the opt-out default's effect on actual organ donation rates. Additionally, it implies that other potential mediating mechanisms, besides descriptive social norms, may be more significant drivers of the effect of opt-out defaults on donation intentions.

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Published

2025-11-13 — Updated on 2025-11-13

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