I've read up on home dialysis, and there is one thing that I am a bit unclear on. If you do any kind of home dialysis, do you need someone to assist you each time, or can you do it all on your own? Do some forms of home dialysis make you more "independent" than others?Thank you.
Well you see, I'm in my second marriage. My husband and I are celebrating our third anniversary together today, as a matter of fact. He knew that I had a kidney disease, but it was only after less than a year of getting married that I discovered how bad it had become and how many meds I was going to need. I joke that I married him only for his insurance! LOL! Anyway, he has been very supportive emotionally, but I find that as time goes on, I am keeping my feelings more and more to myself. I don't think that is good for any relationship, but I don't want him to be subjected to the full impact of my fear. I guess I want to protect him from, well, myself.He works the usual 8-5 during the day, and he teaches at night several times a week. He is not home a lot, and when he is, he is tired, and I'm sure the last thing he wants to do is faff about with me and my needles and machinery.I guess I feel like this is not what he was hoping to get when he married me, and as I try to imagine which path I will take when it comes to dialysis, I find myself drifting more and more away from home dialysis simply because I don't want anyone else to be involved. I do want to make it clear, though, that he has NEVER said anything that would make me think he would not help me. Quite the contrary. I suppose I just feel guilty for the emotional tsunami that followed learning just how serious my condition is and how fragile my "remission" is.Did any of you have real reservations about starting home dialysis because of this issue?Moderators: if you think this belongs in another forum, please move it. Sometimes these topics overlap.
If I were you and going to do Hemo, I would start in center. It is a lot of pressure on a marriage to expect him to come home from work and then put you on dialysis....and sit there with you. Once you have been in center a while and YOU are more comfortable with the process maybe both of you will decide to come home with it.
QuoteIf I were you and going to do Hemo, I would start in center. It is a lot of pressure on a marriage to expect him to come home from work and then put you on dialysis....and sit there with you. Once you have been in center a while and YOU are more comfortable with the process maybe both of you will decide to come home with it.This is the direction toward which I am leaning. All of the pressure I feel is coming from myself, not from him. The dialysis center is literally a ten minute drive from my house. My mom uses it when she comes up from Texas to visit, and she really likes it. On top of that, I think I may have a desire to keep my home "dialysis free". Our home is our refuge, and I am not sure that I want the "dialysis world" to intrude upon that. I guess this is one of those times when you don't really know what you want, and you won't know until the time comes. Maybe I should just stop thinking about it for now.Anyway, thanks everyone for your replies!
They expect that most patients on PD will do it alone, I think.
I've selfdialyzed at home on hemo since August 2002. I know many units have seemingly fixed policies against selfdialysis but I think those policies should be challenged. There is a clear mortality advantage gained through more frequent hemodialysis, more frequent hemodialysis is, in most cases, only practicable at home, therefor there would have to be compelling evidence to deny a person this modality, routinely, because they do not have a helper. There is no compelling evidence of selfdialysis's inherent and unacceptable risk. There are fears, but mostly these fears are over blown and the perceived risks of selfdialysis pale compared to the risk of getting only intermittent dialysis.If Bigsky could demonstrate confidence to his own satisfaction that he could complete his treatment alone then it should be up to him if he would like to selfdialyze. I'll have to look to see if there is a thread on removing one's own needles but typically there is a way, it was/is the scariest part for me to do. I compare selfdialysis to driving a car, if you can do one you can probably do the other. Also it is necessary to remember that not every fender bender results in death. In selfdialysis this means that problems do arise but they can be dealt with - I say that I've had a few spin outs but the airbags have never deployed.At my center the official policy is that you need someone in the house (not necessarily officially trained) and that you should have some kind of "I've fallen but I can't get up" button system if there is no one else there i.e. dialyze alone, which I think is an ill conceived response to the desire to cover all the bases. I think a better response would be to list what we are guarding against and then look at each concern on its merits and consider ways to diminish the risk. How have we diminished the risk when we rely on a helper who is subject to the same range of "what ifs" as any human being? At least at my center I am expected to retain my adult independence and I am expected to retain sovereignty over how much and what sort of risks I am willing to accept. I wish more centers held this expectation even if they did require that you push a button in a ... what exactly? How would that be easier/better than calling 911?
Quote from: MooseMom on February 01, 2007, 11:25:34 AMQuoteIf I were you and going to do Hemo, I would start in center. It is a lot of pressure on a marriage to expect him to come home from work and then put you on dialysis....and sit there with you. Once you have been in center a while and YOU are more comfortable with the process maybe both of you will decide to come home with it.This is the direction toward which I am leaning. All of the pressure I feel is coming from myself, not from him. The dialysis center is literally a ten minute drive from my house. My mom uses it when she comes up from Texas to visit, and she really likes it. On top of that, I think I may have a desire to keep my home "dialysis free". Our home is our refuge, and I am not sure that I want the "dialysis world" to intrude upon that. I guess this is one of those times when you don't really know what you want, and you won't know until the time comes. Maybe I should just stop thinking about it for now.Anyway, thanks everyone for your replies!In-center sucks bottom line, I did it for over a decade and I do NOT want to ever go back. I too was worried about having the added burden for my wife but my wife insisted that I not even think about that. She is VERY supportive, but honestly with NxStage and the Pureflow I practically do it all myself, I wait until my wife comes home from work but she is usually in the other room doing her own thing and she just checks up on me every so often. I stick myself and have been doing that for several years. There is NOTHING like the FREEDOM of dialyzing when ever YOU want not, when a center tells you to come. Plus no more LONG weekends and feeling sick, late Sunday night."In sickness or in health, for better or for worse" remember that? - Epoman
If you are just talking about hemo then sorry i dont know , but for anyone doing CAPD then there is no problem. I have been doing it on my own since the start and i live alone. I went for 3 days training on my own then came home and started. Like anything else its easy once you know how!