This is true. But, 20 years ago they "served" us lunch on trays during dialysis. The reason people choke now is because they are sneaking it. They don't want to deal with the mess if someone pukes or spills their drink. I think it is medical abuse. I wish someone would take them to court over it. There is NO medical reason you can't have a snack on dialysis.
Quote from: Rerun on January 09, 2009, 05:37:51 PMThis is true. But, 20 years ago they "served" us lunch on trays during dialysis. The reason people choke now is because they are sneaking it. They don't want to deal with the mess if someone pukes or spills their drink. I think it is medical abuse. I wish someone would take them to court over it. There is NO medical reason you can't have a snack on dialysis.Sorry gonna disagree with you on this one......If someone eats while in dialysis and then pukes it up, I say pull their ass off the machine and make them clean it up themselves. Same goes if they spill a drink while on the machine.
If someone eats while in dialysis and then pukes it up, I say pull their ass off the machine and make them clean it up themselves. Same goes if they spill a drink while on the machine.
Sorry gonna disagree with you on this one......If someone eats while in dialysis and then pukes it up, I say pull their ass off the machine and make them clean it up themselves. Same goes if they spill a drink while on the machine.
Perhaps we could put together a petition/letter and any of us here who'd like to could print it off, sign it and send it to the company also. I'd be happy to add my voice to a protest about this ridiculous rule.
as soon as you get friendly with someone in a chair by you and you start talking---- they separate youI was told dialysis is not a place to socialize and meet friendsDAVITA SUCKSThis is what goes on at Davita ? Boy I'm sure glad I got out of there after about a month there and got onto PD. Besides being very depressing I just could not take it any longer.
One of the hardest aspects of dialysis is the significant loss control over our own lives. Loss of the spontaneity to travel, loss of the freedom to eat the foods we choose, loss (for many) of the ability to do work of our choice and so on. To remove the control over when we eat our limited diet choices feels cruel and quite unnecessary to me. There are cases in which eating during dialysis is contraindicated for medical reasons but that is not the case for all patients and to have a one-rule-fits-all approach, is to totally ignore the necessity for individualized care. I find that completely unacceptable and as a person who insists on maintaining control over every aspect of my care that I possibly can, I would refuse to participate in this infantilizing, levelling approach. I completely agree with Rerun that this idiotic "rule" has less to do with good medicine than it does with convenience for staff. People in hospitals are fed even though they sometimes make an awful mess because they are ill. We continue to feed babies even though the little creatures insist on spitting up and creating a ton of laundry. When I mention to the nurses at my clinic, some of the things that I hear about on this forum, they are appalled and find it cruel and inhumane. It is rubbish and we ought not to get used to it. We have enough things that we must adjust to with this illness without having to accept the unnecessary or the dogmatic. If there are medical reasons that make it not a good idea for me to eat on D that is when I will get used to it and not a moment before. I will also say that I think it is each patient's responsibility NOT to choose foods to eat on the machine that would be disturbing or offensive (strong odors for example) to fellow-patients but that is an entirely different matter. I would also say that if I couldn't eat in my unit I'd be really upset if the staff was eating in there and I'd write letters about it until my fingers fell off. Get used to it indeed!!!!
Quote from: coorsbob on January 10, 2009, 12:09:30 AMas soon as you get friendly with someone in a chair by you and you start talking---- they separate youI was told dialysis is not a place to socialize and meet friendsDAVITA SUCKSThis is what goes on at Davita ? Boy I'm sure glad I got out of there after about a month there and got onto PD. Besides being very depressing I just could not take it any longer. My center is a Davita center. It is NOTHING like this. Please don't put Davita's name on a center who, it sounds like may have a control freak for an FA.
OMGDoesn't sound very caring. 6 hours without food or water - are you for real I thought Dialysis was a medical procedure where you tried to make the patient as comfortable as possible. Thank goodness here in the top end we don't have anything like this attitude or protocolDad's renal unit cooks food for the patients - three different menus for the patient to chooseThe nurses have insisted on numerous occassions that Dad had to eat and drink whilst on dx machineI would be furious if I had to clean up my vomit or mess whilst I am trying to live with no bloody kidneysI would be the roof if this happened to my fatherWTF
just curious, when your elderly and doing dialysis, maybe they should pull your ass off the machine put you on all fours and clean the mess up dialysios staff get paid for the good and the bad of the job,
I don't understand this view. I'm also happy that no nurses I know subscribe to it. There are many causes for a person vomiting on D, including medications, and the idea that a "patient" should clean up is absurd. Common sense seems so uncommon, it's frankly a bit frightening.
If it becomes clear that the cause of the vomiting is eating on the machine then it is a medical issue and must be dealt with but not by having the patient clean up after being sick. I can't imagine many patients who would continue to routinely vomit on themselves if it could be avoided by not eating. In the case of such a person I would suspect mental health issues and eating on the machine would be the least of the clinic's concerns.