What the....
One Neph in a capital city?? Are you sure?? Where are you guys? Perth? or come to think of it did you say Canberra?
That seems very odd.. but I can't believe the response you got that the neph doesn't let patients make appointments with him but the team does.. what the...?? I'd definitely kick up a stink there with the unit manager that your dad has been put on dialysis and the neph hasn't seen him AT ALL in that time? Who is managing his medication and checking his labs to make sure everything is stabalising and all that kind of thing? Sounds like a mess.
Although maybe what the neph is saying is that if there IS only one(?!!) then you'd think he'd be pretty busy so perhaps the idea is that the dialysis staff should be vetting things a little as in they should be handling more day to day things as opposed to bigger things.. still the mind does boggle somewhat. I can't imagine a situation like that at all.
At least I know in my unit there's 3-4 nephs on the staff so if mine is away (usually the case! LOL) or something I can see one of the others.. most of whom I know in one capacity or another - and they definitely know me!! LOL
Of course I'm attached to a hospital unit so I guess things are different since they're right there.
Anyway onto the motivation issue... 4 months is still pretty early in to dialysis to get settled into the life changes this brings about and it can be very depressing to find suddenly you're resitrcted in diet, drinks and of course the thrice weekly grind to get on the machine. Perhaps you should listen to where your dad is at and try and be there for him. I bet the last thing he wants is his daughter telling him "you HAVE to do this. You HAVE to do that" - I bet he gets enough of that from the dialysis people. Maybe an idea is to sit with him and ask him where he's at and what he'd like. If he's like "oh nothing it's all too much. I feel like crap" and that sort of thing or in denial and not wanting to know about what is going on get the unit manager to refer you to the social worker and/or a psychologist to try and work something out. It is a huge transition but it's also NOT the end of his life...
It's important to remember that dialysis is not the end of his life or anything and he can live quite well with it - even with the restrictions and stuff. It may not seem like it at first, but it is possible (we are all proof!!
)... Does he talk at all with the other dialysis patients? Maybe there might be someone chatty at his unit that he can talk to who has done it for awhile and sort of show him through action they get out and do stuff and live still..
Not sure what else to suggest at this point...