Instead of worrying endlessly about organ availability and the taxpayer costs associated with renal disease why not completely change the way we look at the disease and treatment. First we need national presumed consent for organ donation and for every person needing treatment we require that they undergo a transplant. Transplants are far less expensive than longterm dialysis and the results are vastly superior. Dialysis would still exist for those who couldn't be transplanted for medical reasons but transplantable patients would no longer be able to choose between dialysis and transplant. If a person wanted treatment it would be a transplant with temporary dialysis available before and after the transplant when necessary or if rejection or other complications occur. Letting people who could be transplanted play years long games of "what if" with themselves and our dollars is many times more costly and much less productive for everyone including the patient than a good transplant. For those who want but haven't been able to receive transplants because of long wait times the new program would be a wonderful blessing. After a successful transplant and recovery people would be expected to get back to work and live productively rather than exist in the netherworld of longterm dialysis.Everyone wants to get better and this is one way that it could be done for everyone with renal failure. With fast required transplants patients would be spared the many complications that come with extended dialysis. More people would live longer, more fulfilling lives, with overall treatment costs to taxpayers slashed. Many, many more transplants would be done in more places. Patients wouldn't have to travel as far to transplant centers and the pool of transplant professionals would become vastly larger. Renal failure would tend to be more of a temporary condition that would be relieved quickly by transplants for all.
First they need to get rid of that non sense rule that you don't get medicaid/medicare coverage for your meds for three years after you have your transplant...Dumb rules.
Anyway, maybe our new congress will take a fresh look at renal disease and do something about long-term immunosuppressant coverage.
Quote from: livecam on November 09, 2006, 04:59:43 PM Anyway, maybe our new congress will take a fresh look at renal disease and do something about long-term immunosuppressant coverage.I'm not going to bite.........
Dialysis would still exist for those who couldn't be transplanted for medical reasons but transplantable patients would no longer be able to choose between dialysis and transplant.
Quote from: livecam on November 07, 2006, 03:22:19 PMDialysis would still exist for those who couldn't be transplanted for medical reasons but transplantable patients would no longer be able to choose between dialysis and transplant. Geez.......what happened to freedom of choice? Freedom to choose my own medical treatment? What's wrong with letting people choose what is best for them in their particular situation? ALso I'm trying to understand where you are coming from with this statement. About wasting tax dollars--I can think of HUNDREDS if not THOUSANDS of trivial things our tax dollars are wasted on other than dialysis. I had a transplant for ten years. I don't know if I'm going to get another one anytime soon. I may decide to get listed again. I think I have a form of transplant fatigue. Right now I feel better than I did the last 3 years of the transplant. When I go to dialysis some of the nurses always ask me when I'm going on the list, when I'm going to be evaluated again. When I'm ready to go through it again I'll know inside but now is just not my time. It's hard to explain how I feel, I feel like I'm at a place where I am comfortable for the time being. Not everything is 100% peachy when you get a transplant, I know the score on that one.