) Is it preferable to be able to do your own care (feeling 'in control', 'freedom', 'knowledge') or is this null in the decision?
3) Besides taking care of treatment, what did the aid do during the session to pass the time? Just wondering what should be offered during this time.
Nxstage has dialysis centers where they give patients greater flexibility of choices when it comes to where to dialyze swapping between home and their center, with or without the assistance of professionals. I wish I had one near by :
I gotten used to doing home hemodialysis and I love it, just the freedom of setting my own schedule and doing it in the comfort of my own home makes me happy.
I wonder why no one has picked up on my idea to engage a local nursing school to create a program for their nursing students where they can intern while being a care partner to a HHD person (like me, maybe some day). I think that sounds like a win-win situation. There isn't the expense of paid nursing, and the students learn valuable lessons in HHD and nursing skills. The nursing intern could go through the HHD training with or without the patient, and when their internship is over, another student (who has been trained) takes over. Rinse and repeat.
I do know of several clinics in upstate New York that support patients living alone on home hemo. They require a broadband internet connection and scheduled times so you can be monitored from the clinic. I believe if there is a problem they call the local rescue (ambulance) service to come and disconnect if necessary and transport it needed.