“…The pretransplant evaluation additionally assesses for various psychosocial or psychiatric conditions which may impair or prevent the patient's ability to fully engage in the necessary recovery and management (Morrell et al, 2019;Smith et al, 2016). A clinician with expertise in the behavioral, emotional, and social aspects of transplant, such as a health psychologist, a psychiatrist or a medical social worker, interviews the patient and their caregiver(s) to collect data regarding multiple psychosocial domains, including adherence, mental health, substance use, cognitive capacity, understanding of treatment and treatment options, ability to cope with illness, social support, and social history (Dew et al, 2018). These psychosocial domains have been previously defined and recommended in a joint collaboration between the International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation (ISHLT), Academy of Psychosomatic Medicine (APM), American Society of Transplantation (AST), International Consortium of Circulatory Assist Clinicians (ICCAC), and Society for Transplant Social Workers (SWSW) (Dew et al, 2018).…”