Gerald, Yeah, I knew the risks. I willingly took them. If you are on a transplant list, the risks of transfusions are problem, too. I've had a hemoglobin under 7. I couldn't walk up a flight of stairs in less than half an hour because I had to stop on each step to rest. I certainly couldn't live like that.I think a lot of CKD patients are finding the Medicare limits frustrating because the choice is no longer ours. I think the docs should be informing patients of the pros and cons of keeping levels above 11 and letting them make the decisions. I think it's especially hard on the men. Women run between 11 and 13 when they are healthy, so keeping it between 10 and 11 isn't a big difference. The range for men starts at 13. If your normal healthy level was 15, 11 is going to feel like slow torture.The list of possible side effects from all the meds I've been on and and on now are enough to make anyone curl up and scream in terror. I'm now on immunosuppresants. Hello, cancer risk. But I need them to live, at least to live D free. How is that different from this? It was my choice to seek a transplant and live with that risk. I think it should be everyone's choice to determine how much risk they are willing to run from epo as well.
Anyone who has read what I post would know that I am not the shy type. I hope I speak for well-being of others.gl