I greatly appreciate the affects of Nocturnal, as well as the freedom of scheduling that it provides. But I am still not sleeping at all most nights. The nurses at my clinic are now trying to get me on NxStage. All the first hand experiences sound great, and of course, so do the sales pitches from the company itself. I'm thinking about it. I'd honestly miss the social aspect of the clinic, but would greatly appreciate the personal control over my treatment as well as the potential scheduling allowances and ability to sleep all 7 nights a week. Anyone here every transition from Nocturnal to NxStage? If so, why? How was your transition? Thanks-Daniel
For the dialysis center staff to be pushing NxStage, then first of all, you must be fully insured. This modality is not an option for patients who only have medicare or medicaid. This is a plus.Now the trade-offs and what to consider:1) Do you have someone who is willing to be your partner in home dialysis? While there are folks on here (Meinuk comes to mind) who do NxStage by themselves, it is the exception. However, your partner should only be of minimal assistance and act as a back up if something should happen. Treatment should be your responsibility. Are you willing to assume it?2) What schedule would you run on? Many on here run 6-7 days a week. Are you (and a partner) willing to make that commitment? Side note: Since you are fully insured, check w/your insurance company to see if a home aide would be covered. From my readings, every other day treatment for 3.5 hours could serve you adequately. You currently get 48 hours of treatment every 2 weeks with incenter nocturnal. Every other day NxStage (3.5 hrs.) would give you 49. 3) Both home dialysis and incenter take a mental toll. Which one is the lesser of the two evils for you? Are you comfortable with having to take the responsibility with the payoff being more independence? Are you better at going incenter, having limited control and being at the mercy of the staff? Even if you are in a good center, not all staff are committed to providing good care. You willing to speak up when necessary? Will your clinic allow for "limited" self care on nocturnal - ie: allowing you to cannulate yourself, set-up your station and monitor your treatment?4) Is your ultimate goal receiving a transplant? Do you have folks willing to be a donor or would you need to go on the waiting list? If the former, you might want to stay on incenter nocturnal. If the latter, then home dialysis would be more favorable since the wait times are so long.5) How does each modality fit into your work schedule? If you have to travel, NxStage can go with you! It's much harder to set up transient dialysis (don't even think about last minute plans), and nocturnal even more so.6) This might sound callous, but by saying, "missing the social aspects of the clinic," do you mean the comfort of having staff around? You are doing treatment at night- when is there time to chit chat with other patients? If you are needing support from others going through the same as yourself - especially being still new to renal failure - then come here to IHD for that. If I had full insurance coverage I would be doing home hemo. I hate incenter, but have learned how to make it work for me. You are fortunate to not having that constraint in determining a treatment modality. remember, whatever choice you make doesn't have to be permanent. Quote from: BigRed on June 11, 2011, 06:36:08 PMI greatly appreciate the affects of Nocturnal, as well as the freedom of scheduling that it provides. But I am still not sleeping at all most nights. The nurses at my clinic are now trying to get me on NxStage. All the first hand experiences sound great, and of course, so do the sales pitches from the company itself. I'm thinking about it. I'd honestly miss the social aspect of the clinic, but would greatly appreciate the personal control over my treatment as well as the potential scheduling allowances and ability to sleep all 7 nights a week. Anyone here every transition from Nocturnal to NxStage? If so, why? How was your transition? Thanks-Daniel
Having Medicare primary is not a barrier to using the NxStage - at least it shouldn't be. Are there units not offering NxStage if people have Medicare Primary?#2 rerun those numbers. In general an every other day, 3.5h per treatment schedule using NxStage would not give you enough dialysis. You'd need to go at least five days a week doing 3.5 hour runs.
For the dialysis center staff to be pushing NxStage, then first of all, you must be fully insured. This modality is not an option for patients who only have medicare or medicaid. This is a plus.6) This might sound callous, but by saying, "missing the social aspects of the clinic," do you mean the comfort of having staff around? You are doing treatment at night- when is there time to chit chat with other patients? If you are needing support from others going through the same as yourself - especially being still new to renal failure - then come here to IHD for that. Quote from: BigRed on June 11, 2011, 06:36:08 PM
I'm saying if a patient has only medicaid or medicare as primary and no secondary coverage for the remaining 20%, NxStage will not be offered unless a patient can afford to pay out of pocket each month.