Psychosocial readiness for heart transplant is a CMS-required component of candidate selection. Multiple tools are available to measure a candidate’s mental health and socioeconomic resources and stressors in an attempt to predict which candidates are likely to be successful transplant recipients. These evaluations are performed at the time of candidate selection, but candidates are not typically reassessed in a standardized fashion while on the waitlist.
I collaborated with Audrey Kleet, D.N.P., Chief Heart Failure and Heart Transplant Nurse Practitioner at Columbia University, as part of her doctoral thesis, and with Carmen Alvarez, Ph.D., RN, CRNP, CNM, Associate Professor of Nursing at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, to implement a 12-week surveillance program of waitlisted heart transplant candidates. We sought to assess ongoing caregiver support, housing, transportation, insurance status, and levels of anxiety in potential heart transplant recipients.