How do I find the right team for me?

Blog · Pre-Transplant Guide · Choosing Your Team

How Do I Find The Right Team For Me?

A practical, data-driven way to compare liver (and transplant) programs: outcomes, volume, waitlist size, staffing, and complications—plus the questions that reveal fit. [1] [2]

Date: December 17, 2025  |  Author: Dr. Michael Baruch

Overview

“The best program” is rarely universal. The best program for you is the one that combines solid outcomes, appropriate experience with patients like you, a reasonable path to transplant (or the best non-transplant care if you’re not there yet), and a team you trust to manage complications quickly and transparently. [1]

The good news: in the U.S., there is publicly reported transplant-center data designed specifically to help patients compare programs—especially through SRTR and OPTN resources. [3] [4]

Key idea: Pick your shortlist using data, then pick your final program using fit—communication, coordination, access, and support.
Illustration of a transplant patient and family (SRTR patient resources image)
Choosing a center is a family decision: SRTR patient resources emphasize comparing programs and finding the best fit. [1]

What “Right” Means (For Real Life)

The “right team” is typically the team that can do four things well:

  • Accurately stage your disease and explain the plan in plain language (even when it is complex).
  • Coordinate fast (testing, consults, insurance, listing steps) and respond when you worsen.
  • Manage complications early (ascites, varices, encephalopathy, infections, kidney strain) to reduce hospitalizations and setbacks.
  • Show you the numbers—their volume, waitlist experience, and outcomes—without defensiveness. [3] [5]
Practical framing: Data gets you to a shortlist. Communication and logistics determine whether the program can carry you through a rough week safely. [1]

Facility Statistics to Compare

Use SRTR’s center search and Program-Specific Reports (PSRs) to compare programs on standardized metrics. PSRs include information about candidates waiting, waitlist outcomes, transplant recipients, donors, and post-transplant outcomes. [2] [3]

What to compare Where to find it Why it matters How to interpret it safely
Volume # of liver transplants performed SRTR center search / “Full Report” and PSR tables [1] [2] Experience with surgical complexity, ICU workflows, and complications. Higher volume can help, but “fit” and patient mix matters; compare programs that treat patients like you. [1]
Active patients waitlist size (active candidates) SRTR center “Full Report” / PSR waitlist tables [1] [2] Signals program scale and throughput; helps you ask about access and staffing ratios. A large list isn’t automatically good or bad—ask how coordinators manage communication and urgent changes. [1]
Getting a transplant faster (transplant rate) SRTR 5-tier outcomes / PSR figures [6] Programs differ in how quickly candidates get transplanted (case mix and acceptance practices matter). Compare within your region when possible; ask what offers they accept and why. [6]
Waitlist survival (pre-transplant mortality) SRTR 5-tier outcomes / PSR figures [6] Reflects risk management while waiting—monitoring, escalation, and access. Not purely “center quality”—severity of patients differs; still valuable as a safety signal. [6]
1-year graft survival SRTR 5-tier outcomes / PSR post-transplant outcomes [6] One-year outcomes capture surgical, inpatient, and early outpatient performance. Look at trends across reports (not one snapshot). Ask what they do when outcomes dip. [2]
Center data (national context) OPTN center data reports [4] Provides broader context on activity and system-level data. Use to understand trends; use SRTR PSRs for program-level comparisons. [4] [2]
One-minute shortcut: Use SRTR’s “Find a Transplant Center,” open each program’s “Full Report,” then capture four numbers: volume, active waitlist size, transplant rate tier, and 1-year graft survival tier. [1] [6]

Board-Certified Team and Services to Confirm

Outcomes do not come from surgeons alone. A transplant program is a system: hepatology, surgery, anesthesia/ICU, infectious disease, pharmacy, radiology/interventional radiology, social work, nutrition, and a coordinator infrastructure that can move fast. [5]

Minimum “must-have” questions (and why they matter):

  • Are your transplant hepatologists board-certified? (Ask who manages cirrhosis complications day-to-day.)
  • How many surgeons do liver transplants here? (Ask about coverage nights/weekends.)
  • Coordinator ratio: How many active waitlist patients per coordinator?
  • 24/7 escalation: Who answers when you have fever, confusion, GI bleeding, or sudden swelling?
  • Access: Typical time to return calls/portal messages; urgent labs; same-week clinic availability.
Regulatory baseline: U.S. transplant programs must meet Medicare requirements tied to data submission, experience, and outcomes—this supports minimum quality expectations. [5]
Illustration showing the location of the liver within the human body, with the liver labeled (NIDDK/NIH)
Why the team matters: the liver drives metabolism, clotting factors, and fluid balance—complications can evolve fast, so coordination matters. [7]

Complications and Safety Signals

No program can promise “no complications.” What you can assess is whether the program recognizes complications early and manages them reliably. The SRTR outcome framework explicitly helps the public compare outcomes including pre-transplant mortality, transplant rate, and early post-transplant graft survival. [6]

Ask specifically about the complications that change lives:

  • While waiting: variceal bleeding, infections, worsening ascites, encephalopathy episodes, and kidney injury—how are these handled? [1]
  • Immediately after transplant: early graft dysfunction, bleeding, biliary complications, vascular complications, infections, and rejection—what is their typical pathway and follow-up cadence?
  • Readmissions: How often do patients return to the hospital within 30–90 days, and what are the top causes at your center?
  • Patient support and adherence: social work, medication education, pharmacy access, and infection prevention coaching—how is this delivered?
How to interpret “statistics” wisely: When you compare centers, use the SRTR “full report” metrics to start the conversation, then ask how the program’s patient mix and acceptance practices influence those outcomes. [1] [2]

What to Do Now (Checklist)

  1. Make a shortlist of 2–4 programs using SRTR search (distance + data). [1]
  2. Pull each program’s “Full Report” / PSR highlights: volume, active waitlist size, transplant rate tier, waitlist survival tier, 1-year graft survival tier. [2] [6]
  3. Call the program and ask three logistics questions: coordinator response time, after-hours escalation, and typical evaluation timeline.
  4. Confirm insurance pathway (in-network, travel requirements, transplant pharmacy coverage).
  5. Bring one page to your visit: your history, meds, recent labs/imaging, and your “questions to ask” list.
If you can only do one thing today: open SRTR, find the liver programs you’re considering, and screenshot the “Full Report” summary icons so you can compare side-by-side. [1] [6]

Questions to Ask Your Liver or Transplant Team

  • Statistics / facility: “How many liver transplants did you do last year, and how many active liver candidates are on your waitlist right now?” [2]
  • Outcomes: “Where do your current SRTR tiers fall for transplant rate, waitlist survival, and 1-year graft survival—and what are you doing to improve any area that is not strong?” [6]
  • Team credentials: “Who will manage my cirrhosis complications—your transplant hepatology group—and how do I reach them urgently?” [5]
  • Complications: “What are your most common early complications after liver transplant here, and what is your standard pathway to detect them early?”
  • Coordinator capacity: “How many patients does a coordinator typically manage, and what is your response-time expectation?”
  • Fit: “If I worsen suddenly (confusion, fever, GI bleeding, rapid swelling), what is the exact plan—who do I call, and where do I go?”

References

  1. SRTR (Patient & Families). Find a Transplant Center (how to compare and what to expect).
  2. SRTR. Program-Specific Reports (PSRs): candidates waiting, waitlist outcomes, recipients, donors, and outcomes after transplant.
  3. SRTR. Find and Compare Transplant Programs (public reporting platform).
  4. OPTN/HRSA. Center data reports (national transplant activity and center-level data).
  5. CMS. Organ Transplant Program requirements (Medicare approval, data submission, experience, outcomes).
  6. SRTR. 5-Tier Outcome Assessment (waitlist survival, transplant rate, 1-year organ survival).
  7. NIDDK/NIH. Media Library Asset: Location of the liver within the human body (educational image).
Medical Disclaimer: This page is for educational purposes only. It does not provide medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment and does not create a doctor–patient relationship. Decisions must be made with a licensed clinician and (when relevant) a transplant team. Seek urgent or emergency care for vomiting blood, black or bloody stools, fainting, severe confusion, fever, severe abdominal pain, shortness of breath, or any sudden concerning symptoms—especially if new, severe, or worsening.