He's a real champ, I tell ya. He said he felt okay but was starting to feel the effects of no dialysis and hung in there. Unbelievably, he only brought in 1.6 kilos of fluid! They were shocked. But he had restricted his food and fluid intake and obviously that paid off.
For the most part we got through Winter Storm Uri. Sort of. Hubby went 5+ days without dialysis. Fresenius was without power and had to wait for generators to arrive. That took a few days. But when they were finally up and running, we ran into a transportation problem. We are still without a car and the volunteer medical transport and city taxis were not operating. Another day of no dialysis. The ER was turning people away for dialysis because as expected, they were swamped. Hubby didn't want to bog them down. Finally, on Day 6 the taxis were running and hubby had a treatment. And another this morning. He's a real champ, I tell ya. He said he felt okay but was starting to feel the effects of no dialysis and hung in there. Unbelievably, he only brought in 1.6 kilos of fluid! They were shocked. But he had restricted his food and fluid intake and obviously that paid off. Except that he was thirsty as heck and of course, could eat a horse. No one should have to live like that. It's brutal. Next up, food! Grocery stores and restaurants have run out and waiting to be resupplied. Some had to toss their food out due to spoilage. Hopefully by tomorrow they will have food, something, anything. We are down to a few pot pies and half a box of cream of wheat. Our cats are about to have their last meal. Hubby took a cab to CVS to see what they have. He called them ahead of time and they said they are low on everything but have a little left. We'll see. We never lost power to our apartment but we are literally just up the street from several hospitals. They said some didn't lose power because they are probably on the same circuit as a hospital, fire house or police station and those facilities were avoided for the targeted blackouts. We must be on the same circuit as the hospitals. It was freezing outside and I haven't ever seen this much snow in Texas before. The blowing snow and freezing temps kind of reminded me of my years spent in Colorado. And I don't want to ever live through winters like that again. Gotta hand it to a local kid here though. He didn't have a sled so used a kayak. My vote is on him, he's got a future as a real problem solver. No sled? No prob! I have a kayak! Hhmm...maybe Elon Musk should talk to him. We had to boil water. Oh joy. But I'm not complaining, at least we had the electricity to do it. We can drink tap again but some are still having to boil theirs. The local water company (for water and sewer services) are distributing free water and food. It went on a first come, first serve basis. Not sure but wouldn't be surprised that they ran out in a matter of hours. Breaks my heart reading stories about elderly people and children who died from hypothermia. What hubby and I went through was no picnic but at least we had heat. Some people fought Covid, others feared it and some were homeless but that's not what got them. The damn freezing temps did. Those "rolling blackouts" did. I cry for those people who lost loved ones. So, that pretty much sums it up. We weathered the storm. It's in the 50's today. Too late for those without heat.
I'm following the Facebook group and various people are posting about how long they have had to wait to get into a clinic and it doesn't sound good.
Quote from: iolaire on February 22, 2021, 04:58:57 AMI'm following the Facebook group and various people are posting about how long they have had to wait to get into a clinic and it doesn't sound good.Several hospitals in the DPRM had a decent system - the hospitals got vaccine and were able to administer it to their patient facing staff, eligible people, and additional people who were not yet on the state list but in medical need - for example transplant patients under 75. It has been a "don't call us, we'll call you" system with the hospitals inviting eligible patients in.In his excellency's infinite wisdom Governor "rhino" Baker had decided it is best for all vaccines to be administered under the watchful supervisory arm of the state. Hospitals are only being given enough to honor existing appointments including 2nd shot appointments. My town sent out a notice that it is no longer being allocated vaccine and that all subjects must go to a state run facility like the one in a local shopping mall. My primacy care MD send out a notice "we may get some vaccine; it won't be enough; don't call us asking for status; if you can get it elsewhere please do so".The website for appointments has been overloaded (naturally occurring DDOS event) and when it works people mostly get "no appointments available". It is common for people to make appointments tens of miles away because their local area vaccine site is fully booked.Add in that you prove your medical need by "declaring" that you have two medical conditions - no proof required other than self-attestation.Our US Senator has stated that "equity" (translation: getting those who do not pay taxes vaccinated first) must the FIRST priority in deciding who gets a shot.In short, it is a Cluster-F..k.
Uri is a Hebrew name meaning "my flame, my light." As you say, Kristina, it's a strange name to be given to a deadly storm. It reminded me of the mentalist Uri Geller, a fraud who bent spoons on TV with psychokinetic powers, and the writer Leon Uris, who wrote some long, accomplished novels but is little read today.
Good girl !