We're about to begin the PD training but I have a few questions for you all who have done this already or are just in the know.
Oh lord good luck...... but PD does have advantages and disadvantages... Expect to be working with PD much longer than Hemo though you do it at night... The session time does cut into the early evening hours.... Also you will not know how well it is doing until after you start. They may have to increase dwell time, amount of fluid, and number of exchanges.
1. I had visions of running a fixed drain line to an unused shower but I understand that the drain hose has to be replaced every day. Why is that?
Extension drain lines have a length limitation. Baxter HomePro machines you can connect up to two length sections 12ft each for a total 24 feet. For sanitation reasons and clogging reasons the drain line should be replaced daily. If you start to get drain alarms that is because your drain line is going bad or too long in length....
Make sure you take the end of the drain line to wherever you are draining into. You do not want that line to move and dump onto the floor... Not if it happens but when it happens.... Keep in mind when you change the drain line you will have some waste fluid in the line...
Drain bags are a pain to deal with..... That is what I am using now but will go the drain line route soon. If you are doing this on a floor you care about it would be a good idea to lay a plastic tarp down and put all the crap on it. Keep a plastic tote next to the machine and place any drain bags in the tote. Chances are you will have an accident spill at some point and that stuff will go all over the floor. If in the tote the liquid spill will remain in the tote and not on the floor. A well known supply company is replacing the carpet because after four spills. I had enough... and the carpet is badly soiled... I did not think it necessary to use a tote but yes use a tote... Design a better system.....
2. We'd like to find a piece of furniture just big enough for the Baxter machine setup. Does anyone have any examples of something that doesn't look too utilitarian?
I would ask your dialysis center if you could have or purchase at cost one of the machine carts. They have a flat top surface a little larger than the foot print of the machine. The cart has a bottom shelf for the supplies, caps, masks, ointment applicators, gauze pads. The cart also has castors so the machine could be easily moved. Your set up will not blend into your setting no matter what you do. It will stick out like a sore thumb. Welcome to PD.
3. Does anybody have any suggestions about hiding or covering the unit when it's not in use?
I keep telling the folks at the dialysis center that damn machine is going to end up on the driveway in a thousand pieces. They say I would not do that if I were you.... Right out the second floor bedroom window onto the driveway.. Problem is I cannot get a good running start to push it out of the window. It would probably only go 7-8 feet before crashing down.. I want at least to go 14 feet out.... There will be a day when I say I have had enough and yep out the window! I will video it and put it up on youtube...
4. In the US has anyone had any luck recycling all that plastic?
There is still some liquid in the dialisate bags and if using drain bags it it is waste liquid so this is one of those in the trash disposables. Being green is the least thing I would worry about in dealing with all this. You will have a lot of garbage. Boxes could be cut up and recycled.
Thank you.
Welcome.
Experience cannot beat it....
Ken