I do have to say, I question any dr who says that "one" patient stopped taking their meds and died as a result. First of all, if this is a kidney transplant patient, death is more common as a *result* of taking the meds, because they suppress the immune system and open up the possibility of nasty infections and/or cancer - both can cause death, especially if ignored. Secondly, if a KIDNEY transplant patient stops taking their meds, then the worst that can happen is they end up on dialysis. Now granted, if this same patient ignored kidney rejection/failure like they may ignore an infection or cancer, then yes, maybe death would be imminent then. With any other organ transplant, yes, death would be the end result of organ rejection as a result of not taking meds. As for compliance, your analogy to a broken leg is like comparing apples to oranges regarding compliancy. Reality is - kidneys from deceased donors are a rare commodity, and kidneys from live donors are precious as well. It is not fair to any living donor if you choose to not be compliant with your meds or treatment, and it is not fair to the others on the list who could have gotten your deceased donor kidney if you do the same with that. That is why transplant centers are so anal with compliancy - they NEED to be. In your leg analogy, you are repairing your OWN leg, not getting one from a donor - alive or deceased. The only one who suffers in that equation is you. With a living donor, there is risk to them under going medically unnecessary surgery - and that risk may not show until years later. KarenInWA
I agree with Karen re the fake leg analogy. If we could bioengineer "fake" kidneys that worked as well to cleanse blood as a fake leg works in enabling amputees to walk, we wouldn't be having this discussion. Solid organs suitable for transplantation are just not plentiful enough.
I can't help but feel that there is something wrong with this picture... just don't buy this notion than any center would compel a patient to endure dialysis as some sort of test. I suspect that this doctor of yours is not being totally honest with you. Have you thought about asking him what just what it is about you/your case that would make him tell you that Emory requires you to "commit" to dialysis before you'd be considered for tx? Have they already labeled you "non-compliant" for a particular reason? If so, could your doctor tell you exactly what is expected of you NOW in order to be listed LATER?
I was so surprised that nephrologists did not seem interested in the cause of my CKD.