How are existing transplant patients being looked after safely?
What communication are patients given?
Are potential transplant recipients and donors still able to be prepared for transplantation? How is this managed / experienced?
How are teams rebuilding and re-starting transplantation safely?
What are the good and bad features of the “new normal” and how are teams adapting pathways?
Many transplant centres stopped performing kidney transplants during the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic. This had a massive impact on patients, as well as a knock-on effect on other parts of the kidney care pathway.
Some transplant staff were redeployed to different specialties or roles, impacting on their capacity to prepare patients for transplantation, and many living donor events were cancelled.
Deceased organ donation and transplant activity is now recovering to pre-COVID levels and all transplant centres have now reopened, however transplant centres and renal units are having to develop new ways of working in order to make transplantation safe.
Do you have experience of managing or using transplant services during COVID-19?
Add your voice to this learning community!
Be it a personal reflection, an innovation you are proud of or something you have learnt, get in touch by completing this short and easy form, or email your story in your own words to kquip@renalregistry.nhs.uk.
Shared learning
- Learning from one transplant unit’s transformation in response to COVID-19
University Hospitals Birmingham - Restarting vascular access and transplantation
Review of London kidney teams’ response to COVID-19 - Q&A's for clinicians and patients with regards to COVID-19 vaccines
NHS Blood and Transplant