I would hope that you wouldn't talk the WHOLE time she is in the chair about dialysis. Talking about everyday stuff will take her mind off of her dialysis and pass the time fast! Talking about things you like to do you might find you two have things in common outside of health!
To be honest what I wanted in this thread was more general suggestions for what you would say to anyone starting or you come across for the first time rather than my specific situation. Ty for the responses so far!
On the first day the patient is probably not going to want to hear alot from other patients. They are in the middle of information overload just learning about the procedure, reading the dialysis and Medicare manuals, getting their bearings, and having the living beejesus sucked out of them for the first time. You could wait until the next time or maybe the time after to remind the patient that dialysis is temporary and that she will be getting a transplant. You could bring up the idea of compliance and tell her that doing things the way the docs say is the road to getting that transplant. On my first day of dialysis my neph said "we're going to get you a kidney." I will tell you that I believed that about as much as I thought I was going to win the lottery that Saturday. Well, he wasn't kidding but I would not have believed it THAT day.
Things I've found out about dialysis that the doctors and nurses don't tell you - You have the right to determine your own dry weight and fluid goals. It's a guessing game at first, so you have to bear with the trial and error at the beginning, but once you've got a handle on it, you should do it yourself.You can have them stop pulling fluid anytime you want. It's your treatment. It's up to you.Although it does get a bit easier after the first couple of weeks, you can expect to feel worse after a session than you did when you went in. Figure 4 or 5 hours to start feeling like normal again, especially at the beginning. "Washed out" is a completely inadequate term some days.The chairs are not made for comfort at all, and there isn't anything anyone is going to do about it. Try every combo of pillows and blankets you can imagine to find the best possible position.Doctors and nurses like "one size fits all" approaches. They give the same diet, meds, and fluid restrictions to everyone. Reality is closer to "one size fits most." Some patients quit peeing, not all. Some patients have to have severe fluid restrictions, not all. Some patients have to follow every bit of the diet, not all. Find out what your labs should be, and adjust your life accordingly. Learn to do what works for YOU.Bring lots to do. Mindless time wasters like solitare or tetris can be your best friend. Books are fine, but bring two in case one turns out to be boring. I've started taking a laptop loaded with games, and the time goes a lot faster.I doubt you'll want to be the one to tell her this, Richard, but being a young woman on dialysis has it's own particular set of problems once a month. If you are female, find another woman on dialysis to give you tips on coping with the hormonal fluid gains and problems caused by the heparin. My doctors and nurses were clueless; the other women on this board were a tremendous help to me.
Hubby always talked and joked with people to help take their mind off dialysis. Sometimes he would have the place in an uproar.
I think you should ask her & her mother to meet you sometime (on a day off) for coffee or something, so she can sit up like a normal "human being" and then she may have some questions you can answer and then you can present IHD to her.
Also Richard, why do you think the nurses will be against this site? Because of the name? You do know we have MANY nurses as members right?- Epoman