Biography
As UCSF's International Pacific Rim's Surgical and Medical Liaison, Dr. Trompeta has developed outreach programs to four Hawaiian Islands promoting solid organ transplantation and donor awareness. She has developed outreach clinics in Hawaii for UCSF's Interstitial Lung Disease and Lung Transplantation Program and UCSF's Kidney/Pancreas Transplant Program. She oversees the Living Donor Kidney Transplant Program for pediatrics and Hawaii, performs all online donor health history screening, and orchestrates compatibility testing and medical donor work-ups. She remains clinically active, as well as lecturing professionally, nationally, and internationally and providing community education.
Dr. Trompeta's program of research examines factors related to organ donation and health disparities, including organ donation practices, medical exclusion related to race and ethnicity, and reasons why donors are unwilling to donate. She developed the Organ Donation & Transplantation Knowledge Survey (ODTK), which is psychometrically valid for evaluating organ donation and transplantation knowledge. The results of her instrument were published in Transplantation Proceedings.
Dr. Trompeta has created "The Kumamoto Model," a strategic plan to increase deceased organ donations in Kumamoto Prefecture in Japan. The Kumamoto Model (KM) mission is: to change the Japanese social climate regarding organ donation consent, to establish Japan's self-sufficiency for transplantation by increasing the availability of organs, to create an efficient organ procurement organization, and develop culturally tailored organ donation educational programs. The KM has received support from Governor Kabashima and "Kumamon" as the Ambassador of Organ Donation, with the designed slogan: Extend Life. Do the Honor. Be an Organ Donor.
Dr. Trompeta is a Fulbright Scholar who was awarded a Fulbright U.S. Scholar Grant from the U.S. State Department through the Japan-United States Educational Commission. She will examine the organ donation and transplantation attitudes, beliefs, and knowledge among a population key to Japan’s future - Japanese university students, as well as faculty and healthcare providers who often are the ones who promote and request organ donation consent. She will conduct her research at Kumamoto University, the Japanese Red Cross Kumamoto Hospital, and various academic institutions throughout Japan. Findings from this proposed Fulbright research project will provide a better understanding of why organ donation rates are low in Japan and identify areas of education targeted to both young and older generations.
Awards & Honors
Award | Conferred By | Date |
---|---|---|
United States Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs (Japan) | Fulbright U.S. Scholar | 2024/2025 |
United States Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs (Japan) | Fulbright U.S. Scholar | 2019/2020 |
President | International Transplant Nurses Society | 2019/2020 |
FAAN Fellow of the Academy of Nursing | American Academy of Nursing | 2019/2019 |
Scientific Award | The Transplantation Society (TTS) / International Society for Organ Donation & Procurement (ISODP) | 2015 |
Pilot Research Awards for Junior Investigators in Basic and Clinical/Translational Sciences (Resourc | UCSF | 2012/2014 |
Graduate Student Research Award, | UCSF | 2007/2008 |
Leadership & Education in Adolescent Health Fellowship | UCSF | 2007/2008 |
Pacific Rim Research Program | UCSF | 2007/2008 |
Century Club Award | UCSF | 2007/2007 |
UCSF Alpha Eta Chapter | Sigma Theta Tau | 2007 |
NCEMNA Scholar | NCEMNA | 2006/2007 |
Education
Institution | Degree | Dept or School | End Date |
---|---|---|---|
University of California, San Francisco | Ph.D. | Nursing | 2008 |
University of California, San Francisco | M.S. | Nursing | 1998 |
Clinical Expertise
Pediatrics - Primary and Acute Care
Adolescent Growth & Development
Pediatric Kidney Transplantation
Adult Kidney Transplantation
Program Affiliations
UCSF Department of Surgery
UCSF School of Nursing
UCSF Interstitial Lung Disease and Lung Transplantation Program
UCSF Fetal Treatment program
In the News
Research Narrative
Dr. Trompeta's program of research examines factors related to organ donation and health disparities, including organ donation practices, medical exclusion related to race and ethnicity, and reasons why donors are unwilling to donate. Dr. Trompeta developed the Organ Donation & Transplantation Knowledge Survey (ODTK) which is psychometrically valid for evaluating knowledge about organ donation and transplantation. Results of her instrument are published in Transplantation Proceedings.
Research Interests
Solid Organ Transplantation Outcomes
Organ Donation Practices
Health Literacy
Health Disparities
Publications
- ???????????????????????(International Transplant Nurses Society: ITNS)?????.| | UCSF Research Profile
- Cultural influences on willingness to donate organs among urban native Americans.| | PubMed
- P.164: The Kumamoto Model a strategic plan for transplant sustainability in Japan.| | UCSF Research Profile
- Multicenter investigation of the reliability and validity of the live donor assessment tool as an enhancement to the psychosocial evaluation of living donors.| | PubMed
- The Influence of Social Networks on Living Organ Donors.| | UCSF Research Profile
- Asian American adolescents' willingness to donate organs and engage in family discussion about organ donation and transplantation.| | PubMed
- Prog Transplant| | UCSF Research Profile
- Collaborative Use of the Peer Assist Model in Large Transplant Programs in the United States.| | UCSF Research Profile
- Collaborative use of the peer assist model in large transplant programs in the United States.| | PubMed
- Development of the Organ Donation and Transplantation Knowledge Survey for use in Asian American adolescents.| | PubMed
- A systematic review of the effectiveness of peer-based interventions on health-related behaviors in adults.| | PubMed