not necessarily "exactly"... While there are certainly instances of the "self inflicted injury", there is also the injury caused by inappropriate determination of target ending weight (dry weight or whatever)Early on, before we understood, my brother was hospitalized with a fluid overload. As opposed to going for his dry weight, the techs were looking at what he had come off at "last time" and going for that. Between the errors in subtraction in determining the amount to be removed and the errors in recording ending weight, he gradually built up a fluid overload. The kiss of "death" was a 2 kilo error on top of the gradual buildup. They removed the minimum because they thought he had put nothing on. It was the last session before New Years and the 3 day break. On New Years Day, we ended up in the emergency room. After a brief hospitalization, we asked questions at the unit (that's how we determined how the overload developed.) We learned and we took charge. It took us a month, 0.5 kilos at a time to get to a good dry weight. Since that time we have always told them the target ending weight... and checked their math!Noncompliance is not the only issue.
Don't they listen to your heart and lungs, take your blood pressure and feel your ankles so fluid overload doesn't become critical? They do at my clinic.
Quote from: calypso on October 20, 2009, 04:31:23 PMDon't they listen to your heart and lungs, take your blood pressure and feel your ankles so fluid overload doesn't become critical? They do at my clinic.not in my unit. We do the blood pressures of course, but not the other stuff. I think though if folks came in complaining of breathing problems, etc they might take it further and do that. We also do BVM's to see if people are too wet or dry also and that helps.I've never had my heart or lungs listened to in the unit - only by the neph every 3 months.