because my wait time for an O neg kidney is 6-8 years.
Quotebecause my wait time for an O neg kidney is 6-8 years.When I was in the hospital transitioning from PD to HD, a nephrologist asked my blood type. I said "O neg". He responded with "that's too bad" and walked away.
Welcome to our IHD Family of the afflicted.Wow, you've had to learn a lot with as much as you've had to endure already. And starting so young with so many problems.I hope you are Female cause I think I am falling in love with your attitude. We have to be our own advocate and become very involved with all medical decision making as Doctors and Nurse do NOT always know what is really right for us as we are individuals and dn't always conform to the masses.You should be proud of yourself for making those decisions. Keep up your studies, it does help.Take Care,Charlie B53
If there was ever an intro that felt like it's been shot out of a cannon, it's yours. In the best way! I don't think I breathed the whole time. If you're up for it, please write a novel about all this because wow.I'm O+ and my wait here in Colorado is similar. They said possibly nine years as the wait seems to get two years longer every five years. I'm 42 now and resigned to spending the balance of my 40s waiting it out. If they come out with the mechanical kidney, I'm more than happy to be a guinea pig.I hate those pre-loaded syringes. I read a peer-reviewed study that the plastic caused no harm, but I remain skeptical. I used to be able to convince a tech to draw from the saline bag instead but since then it's been written in stone and no luck.Anyway, welcome!
Hello ezilu welcome to the site.You seriously seem to have gone through it. Not sure if I should offer my sympathies for your suffering or my congratulations for surviving it all.For anyone reading your post and wondering how you survived it all, I would say the answer is in the line "I'm demanding, self-advocating, and refuse to take crap from any Doctor, Nurse or Tech." I spent 3 months in hospital, nowhere near as serious as your problems, and there are several occasions where, if I had not said "No" to a doctor or nurse I would be dead by now. And I am about to start medical treatment that would not be necessary if a doctor had not won an argument with me two years ago. So well done for keeping yourself alive by arguing.
That would be fantastic! I would love to read that, because I have been giving them the side-eye ever since they switched to syringes.And of course, the saline bag and the hard syringe are different plastics! My clinical staff at least agreed on that one, but it took me printing out the article and showing them to let them know that the weird plastic absorption is A Thing. Other patients complained of the taste, so I eat a peppermint while coming off to mask it... And it makes sense that the longer they sit in storage, the more they leech. Some weeks, I can tell if they've opened a new box from storage because the taste is stronger or weaker.
I've always hated plastics, in all forms.
It should be very well known that 'Charlie's' are heart-breakers. We can't help it, we're lovable, but we can't stay, we must move on.I've always hated plastics, in all forms. Once upon a time products were made of real materials, wood, metal, glass. As a sick kid, constantly needing injections twice daily, RN living next door came over and poled me in the butt until Mom practiced enough the Nurse gave Mom the go-ahead to start poking me. Mom kept that glass-on-glass syringe in a Tupperware bowl of fresh alcohol, constantly flushing and rinsing the rig and needle before AND after every use. Constantly changing the alcohol to make double sure that syringe was always sterile. While she may have learned well, I didn't like it one bit. What little boy wanted his Mom of all people to stick him in the butt twice a day? That's were I developed my aversion to needles. Which still persists today.I blame corporate greed for a disposable society and the rampant use of plastics. I simply won't buy the stuff. I'll find something else or do without when ever possible.
And then at the clinic three times there's this big octopus bundle of plastic and tubes and towels and tape that gets thrown away.
At home, I dutifully take my 1s and 2s to the recycling center and try to avoid any plastic that can't be recycled locally. And then at the clinic three times there's this big octopus bundle of plastic and tubes and towels and tape that gets thrown away.But I'm grateful. Someone at my previous clinic was exposed to MRSA when they reused their dialyzer on another patient. Bad bad bad. So I'm perfectly happy to have new gear each time.The pre-filled plastic syringes, I'm told, are required by my state because they are more sterile than drawing from the saline bag. I don't think it's a cash grab issue. I was on private insurance for a little over a year on dialysis and I had EoBs that were beyond unbelievable -- that's where the cash grab is.
Quote from: LorinnPKD on June 17, 2018, 10:06:03 PMAnd then at the clinic three times there's this big octopus bundle of plastic and tubes and towels and tape that gets thrown away.Both the clinic and the hospital here have bins in pairs. One for anything that could be infectious, which is incinerated, and one for all other waste, which is recycled.