Abstract

In the United States, there is a significant shortage of available donor organs. This requires transplant professionals to hold simultaneous, yet divergent roles as (1) advocates for patients who are in need of a lifesaving transplant, and (2) responsible stewards in the allocation of scarce donor organs. In order to balance these roles, most transplant teams utilize a committee based decision-making process to select suitable candidates for the transplant waiting list. These committees use medical and psychosocial criteria to guide their decision to list a patient. Transplant regulatory bodies have established medical standards for identifying appropriate medical candidates for transplantation. However, transplant regulatory bodies have not developed policies to standardize psychosocial criteria for listing patients. This affords transplant centers the autonomy to develop their own psychosocial criteria for determining which patients will be placed on the transplant waiting list. This lack of a standardized policy has resulted in inconsistent psychosocial practices amongst transplant centers nationwide. Since there has been no formal review of the inconsistency in psychosocial policy and practice, this paper seeks to explore the non-standardized psychosocial approach to organ transplant listing. The authors review factors that are relevant to the standardization of the psychosocial decision-making process, including shared decision-making, clinician judgment, bias in decision-making and moral distress in transplant staff. We conclude with a discussion about the impact of these issues on psychosocial practices in solid organ transplantation.

Highlights

  • When a patient is experiencing end-stage lung disease one treatment option that may be available is a lung transplant

  • Transplant regulatory bodies in the United States have not established universal psychosocial assessment or listing criteria. This has afforded transplant centers the autonomy to develop their own psychosocial criteria that patients must meet in order to be placed on the transplant waiting list

  • We provide an exploratory review of this issue as a way to initiate professional dialogue within the transplant community about the role of psychosocial assessments and listing criteria

Read more

Summary

Introduction

When a patient is experiencing end-stage lung disease one treatment option that may be available is a lung transplant. If a patient is an appropriate candidate they are placed on a waiting list Both medical and psychosocial factors are considered when determining a patient’s candidacy for transplantation and placement on the waiting list. Transplant regulatory bodies in the United States have not established universal psychosocial assessment or listing criteria. This has afforded transplant centers the autonomy to develop their own psychosocial criteria that patients must meet in order to be placed on the transplant waiting list. This has resulted in inconsistency of psychosocial practices amongst transplant centers nationwide. The current approach to psychosocial assessment and listing criteria is non-standardized

Objectives
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call