By Peter Laird, MD...What am I missing in this equation?http://www.hemodoc.com/2011/05/nxstage-patients-must-comply.html
They just think all patients are stupid. For Baxter PD supplies, the representative also asked for inventory. I told them every time that I did not know my inventory, but I did know what I need. Fortunately, Baxter representatives were willing to take my order without giving out inventory. I ordered just enough for 4 weeks, and if I traveled, I reduced the amount from traveled days. When the new supplies came, I had about 10 ten days of supplies left. So, it was not necessary to count inventory.
I searched on COMPLY and found this chain. Now I am worried. Not on home dialysis - yet. But I am having trouble fitting into the round holes, being a square peg. I have grrrreat numbers, actually pretty high functioning PKD, massive Polycystic Liver, even cysts in the pancreas. I never gain fluid, but I need Epo and iron. I want to change my schedule, knock it down to 2 days a week. I feel so bad after treatment, and my diet is very well controlled. But the doc and Fresenius are not listening to me. I have had to miss a couple of sessions, and nothing happened. Why won't they take that into consideration and work with me. I know my body very well. Not as good as you do yours, Hemodoc, but I do try to keep up with the latest medical papers and knew a lot more about nutrition than my last 2 nephs. Spooky. Advice?
Quote from: FineWhine on May 06, 2011, 05:24:49 PMI searched on COMPLY and found this chain. Now I am worried. Not on home dialysis - yet. But I am having trouble fitting into the round holes, being a square peg. I have grrrreat numbers, actually pretty high functioning PKD, massive Polycystic Liver, even cysts in the pancreas. I never gain fluid, but I need Epo and iron. I want to change my schedule, knock it down to 2 days a week. I feel so bad after treatment, and my diet is very well controlled. But the doc and Fresenius are not listening to me. I have had to miss a couple of sessions, and nothing happened. Why won't they take that into consideration and work with me. I know my body very well. Not as good as you do yours, Hemodoc, but I do try to keep up with the latest medical papers and knew a lot more about nutrition than my last 2 nephs. Spooky. Advice? Dear FineWhine, two days a week is not enough dialysis to sustain life. You state that you feel terrible after dialysis, but if you did dialysis at home on a daily basis, you will discover the hidden secret of dialysis, it is not dialysis that is causing all of your symptoms, it is the WAY the for profit dialysis companies such as Fresenius DO dialysis with short treatment times and high ultrafiltration rates that causes the "symptom" of dialysis such as nausea, vomiting, cramping, light headedness, dizzyness, passing out, terrible thirst after dialysis, headaches, fatigue and general malaise that all lead to high rates of depression. My goodness, who wouldn't be depressed enduring such torment three times a week.I would strongly recommend against skipping dialysis sessions since the medical data shows very conclusively that puts you at higher risk of death. Instead, learn about short daily or nocturnal dialysis where the changes during dialysis are less severe and through which I suffer no symptoms whatsoever with my dialysis unless it has been after a two day hiatus where I get a mild headache from the fluid and solute shifts across the blood brain barrier. Dialysis performed within simple physiologic parameters inside the body, working with them not against them will give you an entirely different outlook on dialysis than the usual in-center experience that is dominated by time constraints from the for-profit industry where they need to get so many widgets through the dialysis widget factory as quickly as possible, but only three times a week. Since they don't care if you die because there are many more widgets that will take your place, the only way to obtain gentle, symptom free dialysis is to go home.So, I would strongly recommend that you reconsider two days a week unless of course you wish to exit this world quickly. The data is clear, longer duration and more frequent dialysis saves lives. Take a look at couple of my posts that goes over the short daily and nocturnal data compared to transplant as well as PD data. Taking a look at these studies noted in these posts, it is clear that the two best options for survival are transplant or nocturnal/daily dialysis. Twice a week dialysis just is not in the consideration of survival at all.http://www.hemodoc.com/2011/04/what-is-the-expected-lifespan-on-daily-nocturnal-dialysis.htmlhttp://www.hemodoc.com/2011/04/what-is-the-expected-lifespan-on-short-daily-dialysis.htmlhttp://www.hemodoc.com/2011/01/is-peritoneal-dialysis-the-optimal-choice-for-america.html