I think I could follow this. I would love to see a video.
I've been pulling my own needles since August 2002 - starting out it is was the scariest part of self-dialyzing but now after pulling over a 1,000 2,500 needles it feels pretty routine. I'll try to describe it, I've been meaning to put a video together, my to do list is pretty long it's on there somewhere.
So are you able to reach to unhook the lines first to do your rinseback then pull them?
I have pulled one needel by myself over the years. My center does not like to do that technique. But some fo these nurses have worse technique than I would have. Have you ever had the "oops I pulled it out without realizing it" needle? I hate those ones. Blood goes everywhere. I just grabbed the spot and held on tight.
My unit is chronically understaffed. It a real dread when you had to be taken care of by a green or careless tech. Do absolutely insist on doing whatever the part you can do Inserting the needles is the only thing I an not manage on my own.
Wish you the best of luck
I do understand. I had to stick myself in virgin arm space today. I hate the idea of infiltrating myself.One thing I've heard from other dialyzors is that to get their head around self cannulation it helped to "play" with a needle. See if they'll let you take a needle home. Hold it. Look at it. Really look at it. Cannulate an orange a few dozen times. Have a shallow fistula? Cannulate an apple. Try to get the needle through the skin of the fruit but not into the "flesh". Maybe it sounds weird but has helped others imagine themselves cannulating their own access.Having green staff come at me with a needle was what got me to give self-cannulation a try. If you can bring yourself to self-cannulate you'll be happy you did. Self-cannulation makes dialysis less stressful.
Have a shallow fistula? Cannulate an apple. Try to get the needle through the skin of the fruit but not into the "flesh".
The skin is the peel, the flesh is the white stuff they make into apple sauce.