He is very much against the idea of working, on principle.
Hi unvaso! I am a renal social worker, too! This website has the listing of diagnoses used for SSDI: https://www.ssa.gov/disability/professionals/bluebook/AdultListings.htm. It is possible for him to stay on SSDI due to other medical issues, but the psychiatrist is right; he would lose his SSDI for ESRD because technically he does not have ESRD when he gets a kidney transplant. He moves back up to CKD. I would have the patient call the local Social Security Office to make sure his SSDI is under ESRD and not another diagnosis first. Then I would ask how switch him over to a new diagnosis without starting the process all over again (which is a total pain and often has long wait times). Be sure the patient knows that he not only loses his SSDI, but his Medicare as well a year after transplant. SSDI and Medicare go hand in hand.
Do they have the same work requirement for everyone? I'm 75 and if I were to be listed for Tx, I would say it was unlikely that I would work afterwards because how many people hire 75 year olds these days? Maybe I could wheel people's groceries to their cars, but probably not much more. Any job I could be hired for wouldn't improve my quality of life. So does that bar me from getting a Tx?