These people are not stupid, so don't assume that they aren't going to see right through your "I'm so happy" act.
There are all sorts of ways to find a good psychiatrist in your area. I know a great one in Long Beach - she specialises in cancer patients and receives calls from all over the country for help. If it's not too far, shoot me a PM and I'll dig up her name. Yes, I've gone to her, and I would still be going to her if we had not moved.
I've also always had the sense that the medical people here want us transplanted and that they aren't looking for ways to stop that and keep us on D. It costs our country too much and no one's making money from it.
About the social worker - the one at Northwestern said she would 'pass' me, or whatever the term was, if I promised to make an appointment with a local therapist and give her the contact information. I promised. And I lied. And I'm glad I lied. I did end up seeing a psychiatrist, for my own reasons, not because some blithering idiot of a social worker told me to, and I told this woman (the psychiatrist) that I had no intention of letting this social worker within a hundred meters of my mental health records, and she totally agreed with me. She offered to write her a letter telling her to piss off (in a professional way, I am sure) but Northwestern had already demanded that I sign all of my right to privacy away, meaning that if they could find a place that had my records, they could request them.(Note to self, revoke that right from them! I must check that that has expired!)
Cariad, I think that social workers in Canada are a bit different than in the US. Generally, Renal Social Workers are trained as counselors as well. If they believe that you have a mental health issue that they can't handle, they are allowed to refer you to someone they believe can. There was a social worker in Halifax that I really liked, and I was able to talk to her about a lot of things. Unfortunately, she has since retired, so I can't go to her.Monrein, all I was told was that there were massive amounts of scar tissue on both of the transplanted kidneys. The first one, I understand. I had it about 8 years, which is about average for a cadaveric kidney. The second one only lasted 3 years, and it was covered in massive amounts of scar tissue as well. I would have liked it if someone has looked into it, to see what had caused the scarring, but as far as I know, no one ever has, and the demise of the second kidney was blamed on me. I distinctly remember complaining about pain around the kidney less than a year after I got it, but I was dismissed by most of the doctors that I saw, one even telling me that it was all in my head. I often wonder what would have happened if I had been taken seriously then, if I would still have that kidney now.