✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount

SleekRank for solid-organ transplant surgeon directories

ASTS-affiliated transplant surgeons by UNOS-recognised center, organ program, and SRTR outcomes tier. SleekRank reads the center roster sheet and ships /transplant-surgeons/{slug}/ pages from one base WordPress page, with mappings handling surgeon counts, program scopes, schema, and OG tags.

€50 off for the first 100 lifetime licenses!

SleekRank for Solid-organ transplant surgeons by center

Help patients navigate transplant programs by center

A patient evaluating their UNOS-listed transplant center, or considering a second listing at a higher-volume program, searches "liver transplant surgeons [city]" or "[center name] transplant team". Public SRTR reports cover programs but rarely surface individual surgeons. ASTS membership data exists but is not published by center. SleekRank brings it together. One sheet of about 250 UNOS-recognised centers, each row carrying surgeon counts by organ, SRTR outcomes tier, program scope (kidney, liver, heart, lung, pancreas), and waiting-list volume, drives every URL.

One row per center, one URL per row. The slug column maps to /transplant-surgeons/{slug}/, surgeon_count flows into a hero stat, srtr_tier drives a badge, and a JSON column of named surgeons with organ specialties feeds a list block. Meta mappings carry title, description, canonical, and og:image keyed to the slug. A second page group filtered by organ runs /liver-transplant-surgeons/{center}/ from the same source.

The base page is a normal WordPress page in your theme, so design, schema, and tracking carry across all 250 URLs. The XML sitemap auto-includes every produced page, stale rows 404 cleanly on the next cache refresh, and a faculty hire is a single sheet edit. No CMS sprint, no engineer.

Workflow

From UNOS roster to a 250-center transplant directory

1

Merge UNOS, ASTS, and SRTR

Combine UNOS center memberships, ASTS surgeon rosters, and SRTR outcomes data in one Google Sheet. Columns: slug, center, surgeon_count, srtr_tier, programs, plus a JSON column of named surgeons by organ.
2

Design the base page

Build one WordPress page with #hero-stat for surgeon count, #srtr-tier for the outcomes badge, #programs for the organ chip row, and a list block for named surgeons grouped by organ specialty.
3

Wire the SleekRank mappings

Map slug to URL and H1, surgeon_count to the hero stat, srtr_tier to the badge, programs to chips, and the surgeons JSON column to the list block. Add meta mappings for description, canonical, og:image.
4

Publish and refresh on SRTR cycles

Save the page group, flush rewrites, and the XML sitemap fills with /transplant-surgeons/{slug}/. Refresh the cache whenever an SRTR release or ASTS roster update lands, typically twice yearly.

Data in, pages out

From UNOS center row to one URL per program

Each row in the center sheet becomes one center page. The slug column drives the URL; the rest of the columns flow into surgeon counts, SRTR tier, organ programs, and the named-surgeon list.
Data source: UNOS + ASTS center roster
slug center surgeon_count srtr_tier programs
cleveland-clinic Cleveland Clinic 22 Tier 1 Kidney, Liver, Heart, Lung, Pancreas
mass-general Massachusetts General 19 Tier 1 Kidney, Liver, Heart, Lung
ucsf UCSF Medical Center 26 Tier 1 Kidney, Liver, Heart, Lung, Pancreas
houston-methodist Houston Methodist 21 Tier 1 Kidney, Liver, Heart, Lung
duke Duke University 18 Tier 1 Kidney, Liver, Heart, Lung
URL pattern: /transplant-surgeons/{slug}/
Generated pages
  • /transplant-surgeons/cleveland-clinic/
  • /transplant-surgeons/mass-general/
  • /transplant-surgeons/ucsf/
  • /transplant-surgeons/houston-methodist/
  • /transplant-surgeons/duke/

Comparison

SRTR center reports vs SleekRank for transplant surgeons

SRTR program reports

  • SRTR program reports name centers and outcomes but rarely individual surgeons
  • ASTS member directory exists but is not segmented by UNOS center
  • UNOS center pages list contact info, not surgical team rosters
  • Patients evaluating a transplant team cannot quickly see who operates and on which organ
  • No schema on official sources, so aggregator pages dominate search
  • Updates ship slowly, never reflecting recent faculty hires or departures

SleekRank

  • One WordPress base page powers all 250 center pages via SleekRank
  • Map surgeon_count and srtr_tier to hero selectors
  • List mapping renders surgeon cards from a JSON column per row
  • Filter the same source into /liver-transplant-surgeons/{center}/ as a second page group
  • XML sitemap auto-generated for every produced /transplant-surgeons/{slug}/
  • Edit a row and the matching page refreshes on the next cache cycle

Features

What SleekRank gives you for Solid-organ transplant surgeons by center

UNOS plus ASTS plus SRTR

Pull UNOS center membership, ASTS surgeon rosters, and SRTR outcomes data into one Google Sheet. Each row carries center, surgeons, SRTR tier, and program scope. SleekRank reads the merged view directly.

Organ-specific page groups

Run /kidney-transplant-surgeons/{center}/, /liver-transplant-surgeons/{center}/, /heart-transplant-surgeons/{center}/, and /lung-transplant-surgeons/{center}/ as parallel page groups against the same data filtered by organ.

Outcomes-tier badges that update

SRTR publishes program outcomes biannually. Set a 24 hour cache for steady state, and invalidate on demand whenever a fresh SRTR release lands. Tier badges flip across all relevant pages on the next cache refresh.

Use cases

Where transplant center pages help patients and referrers

Patient second-listing research

Patients comparing centers for a second listing want surgeon-level depth and SRTR outcomes tier per center. Center pages naming surgeons by organ help them have an informed conversation with their primary center's team.

Referring nephrologist and hepatologist workflows

Referring physicians evaluating where to send a complex patient benefit from a center page that lists the surgeons by organ, SRTR tier, and waiting-list volume. The referral conversation gets to the right surgeon faster.

Workforce reporting for transplant societies

Aggregate the same row data into regional views of surgeon density, outcomes tier distribution, and program scope. Reuse the data layer to publish industry reports that rank for transplant-policy queries.

The bigger picture

Why center-level transplant pages outrank scattered sources

Solid-organ transplant is a years-long relationship and a high-trust decision. Patients evaluating their UNOS-listed center, or considering a second listing at a higher-volume program, need surgeon-level depth alongside SRTR outcomes tier. Public sources do not put those together.

SRTR ranks programs but rarely names surgeons, ASTS lists surgeons but does not cluster by UNOS center, and patient forums fill the gap with anecdote. The result: a search for "liver transplant surgeons Cleveland Clinic" returns scattered fragments rather than a single canonical page. Google rewards whoever publishes a real URL per center with concrete counts, named surgeons by organ, current SRTR tier, and program scope.

Hand-building 250 center pages and keeping them current across biannual SRTR releases and a steady stream of faculty moves is unrealistic for a small clinical operations team. Maintaining 250 rows in a sheet the same analyst already uses for workforce reporting is a normal week. SleekRank wires the sheet directly to a rendered WordPress page, so the analyst who edits the row is the analyst who ships the page.

Organ-specific subsets are one filter away rather than a parallel build, and patients finally find center-level depth that respects how the field actually organises itself.

Questions

Common questions about SleekRank for Solid-organ transplant surgeons by center

Most teams combine UNOS center directories with ASTS member rosters and SRTR public-use files. Maintain the merged view in one Google Sheet with provenance columns. SleekRank reads the merged view directly so a clinical operations analyst owns the data without touching WordPress.

 

Store programs as a structured column (Kidney, Liver, Heart, Lung, Pancreas, Multi-organ) and render them as chips on the center page. Drive separate organ-specific page groups from the same data so /liver-transplant-surgeons/{center}/ has the depth detail patients need for that organ.

 

SRTR releases program outcomes twice yearly. Sync the tier column on each release cycle and invalidate the cache so the badges propagate. The base page does not change, only the data layer, so the page group reflects current outcomes within hours of release.

 

Public surgeon-specific outcomes are limited. Most teams display center-level SRTR tier prominently and add a note that individual surgeon outcomes are discussed at the patient's evaluation. Avoid implying surgeon-level outcomes the data does not support.

 

Yes. Use SleekRank meta mappings to inject Schema.org JSON-LD with type Hospital or MedicalOrganization for the center, plus Physician sub-entities for the named surgeons. Each generated URL is a distinct entity in search, which is what they need to surface for center-specific queries.

 

Update both rows in the source sheet (remove from origin, add to destination). On the next cache refresh both center pages reflect the move. The surgeon's named card disappears from the origin page list and appears on the destination, no manual page edits in WordPress.

 

Yes. Run /liver-transplant-surgeons/{volume-band}/{center}/ from a joined data set of organs and volume bands. SleekRank ships the cross-product so /liver-transplant-surgeons/high-volume/cleveland-clinic/ goes live alongside /transplant-surgeons/cleveland-clinic/.

 

Yes. The base page is a normal WordPress page in your theme, so it lives alongside patient-education content. Cross-link education articles to the relevant /transplant-surgeons/{center}/ pages, and center pages back to organ-specific education. Internal link equity compounds.

 

Pricing

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