I've been looking at the website, and reading the posts from people on the NXStage, but I haven't found any mention of it. Epoman's training mentions being taught what to do if the power goes out while you are hooked up, but what do you do if it goes out and stays out for days at a time?I live in Northern Michigan, and we lose power a lot in the winter. We don't just get break-out-the-snow-shovel storms; we get call-out-the-National-Guard storms. The kind of snow where the basketball hoop disappears under a drift and you have to climb out the window on the second floor because all the doors are blocked off. I know the local power company has a program that lets people with life support systems register to be first for power restoration, but that could still be days if the weather is bad enough. And even if the NXStage is portable, if the weather is too horrible for the power company to get things fixed, I'm most likely going to be snowed in at home as well, and unable to get out to somewhere with electricity. Can I run it off of something small, or do I have to figure out how to squeeze the money for a gas-powered generator out of budget that is already pinched so tight it's gasping for air?And maybe this should be a separate topic, but if my hubby gets snowed in at work, is it possible to do the dialysis by yourself? (At least if I get over my squeamishness about sticking myself, but that's another problem.) I know all the reasons not to - you might pass out, etc. But if the choice is self-dialysis or missing a treatment because I'm stuck here by myself, is it possible to run the set-up without help?
No, moving isn't an option, not that it would solve the power outage problem anyhow. All of Northern Mi has blackouts during storms, even the bigger cities - it's just part of life around here. And being far from medical assistance in an emergency is the norm in the area as well. (My emergency medical team, however, is in-house. My husband is an EMT. He has does volunteer runs with one of the local ambulance services. They serve two entire upper peninsula counties. Even in good weather, driving as fast as they can, it's not unusual for them to take 45 minutes to an hour to get to the location.) PD isn't an option either - not highly reccomended for brittle diabetics. I have enough trouble with my whacked-out blood sugar without pumping liquid sugar directly into my gut. Add in my gastroparesis and double the fun. . . I already qualify for the "Contents Under Pressure" t-shirt one of the posters suggested for Epoman's t-shirt collection, without adding bags of fluid to the mix. The point of wanting to do home hemo was to not have to rely on being able to go to the center. The closest center is an hour away in good weather. I'm far more likely to miss treatment if I have to drive that distance three times a week during the winter snow. My father-in-law runs a small engine repair business about a block from my house. I just found out today that he has a little generator there he uses for some of his work. It wouldn't be big enough to power the whole house, but it might be strong enough to run the dialysis machine. Going to get specs on it and see if I would need an adapter or anything else to use the NX Stage with it. It would be a cold hike with a 70 pound box on a sled, but it would beat getting sick from skipping the treatments. (Keeping sterile while doing dialysis in a grease-soaked workshop . . . hmmm. . . okay, I'll just have to figure that out later - I can only handle one problem at a time!)Maybe I just better hope for a mild winter.
BUT, if I recall correctly, one large enough to power the NxStage costs about $3,000. I don't recall the electrical parameters (watts/AMPS, volts) but I think they were so limited that the normal electrical fluctuations of a small generator may preclude it being hooked directly to a generator.
Wouldn't a surge protector protect from the fluctuations from the generator?