Christ Stauffenberg, when was the last time you had an interview. Like I said mine started with a room full of people watching videos then short meetings with various medical and social workers. yea it lasted a couple hours but it wasn't water boarding...Boxman
You have to be cautious at these interviews, since the increasing number of patients needing a transplant, in contrast to the stagnant number of organs available for transplant, is causing transplant teams to hunt for any conceivable excuse to exclude people from eligibility, just to keep the waiting times low enough to provide some faint hope for those who make it to the list.There are also neurotics on some of these committees who enjoy playing God with other people's lives, and they can only fully feel and enjoy their own power if they exercise it arbitrarily. Thus one 18-year-old girl was denied listing for a transplant because in the transplant coordinator's opinion 'she was insufficiently mature,' but how mature do you have to be to be able to handle being healthy again a taking pills twice a day? Anyone seven years old and up should be able to manage it.In the same way, someone might try to say that because of prior depression you may not be sufficiently psychologically stable to be trusted to follow your medication and post-transplant treatment regimen, which we both know is nonsense, since you would have to be a psychopath not to be able to comply with something so simple. But this game is not fair so you have to play by their rules, so try to look as happy and insipid as Doris Day during the interview, which is just the type these conformist medical policemen like to see.
whats water boarding?
No Charee... I've never had any kind of review or meeting anyone... they take the "transplant bloods" every 2 months(I think) for the red cross to do the tissue typing etc etc... and that's all I hear about it.Maybe I should ask the transplant co-ordinator?