The way we are handling X-mas and New Years Day was voted on by the patients. We are going to be open X-mas Eve and New Years Eve both of which are Sundays. We will open a little early on both those days so we close early too, and then the schedule will go back to normal starting that Tuesday. I know other clinics in the area though that the patients actually wanted to just come on their regular days so they are open for X-mas and New Years.
So the dialysis patient has the grim choice of having either medically sub-standard dialysis in the U.S. with its attendant higher death rate but at evening hours that allow the patient to maintain a normal job, or to have high-standard dialysis in Europe with treatment times only between 10 AM and 4 PM, guaranteed to destroy your working capacity, even if they keep you healthy enough to be able to work!
In short I am being dialyzed once in five days, two times over the week. I was wondering how you feel after that two day break from dialysis. I know I feel that I am ready for dialysis sometimes have a headache, sometimes the shakes. Plus more fluid on than usual. But the unit in there wisdom. Have decided to dialyse me on the Sat 16th, Thurs 19th and not again until Friday 22nd then back to 3 times a week Sunday, Wensday and Friday for the next two weeks. When my dialysis days are Tues, Thurs and Saturday. Plus the unit is closed for only two days 25th December and the 1st January? I have been talking to the nurse who as done the rota but she will not explain way she as done it this way . Causing chaos on the unit.
... the only people who need to change their schedule would be the M,W, F people in that instead of Monday of those two weeks they would come in on Sundays (Dec 25 to the 24 and Jan1 to Dec 31) and keep their W, F times the same and leave the T,T,F people where they are.
Quote from: Hawkeye on December 06, 2006, 10:10:42 AMThe way we are handling X-mas and New Years Day was voted on by the patients. We are going to be open X-mas Eve and New Years Eve both of which are Sundays. We will open a little early on both those days so we close early too, and then the schedule will go back to normal starting that Tuesday. I know other clinics in the area though that the patients actually wanted to just come on their regular days so they are open for X-mas and New Years.I think that's very fair.Quote from: stauffenberg on December 06, 2006, 09:12:33 AMSo the dialysis patient has the grim choice of having either medically sub-standard dialysis in the U.S. with its attendant higher death rate but at evening hours that allow the patient to maintain a normal job, or to have high-standard dialysis in Europe with treatment times only between 10 AM and 4 PM, guaranteed to destroy your working capacity, even if they keep you healthy enough to be able to work!That's why there is home hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis.
My centre is actually having us dialyze an extra day so we are doing 4 sessions instead of 3 so I will be doing Mon, Weds, Fri, Sun of Xmas week then Weds, Fri, Su and back to normal routine on Weds. They don't usually open on Sundays.Like I keep telling everyone, my unit is excellent and I truly believe the patients come first where I am!Ok, going 4 times in a week is a pain in the butt but it has it's advantages for me, the main one being I have to have both Xmas Eve and New Year's Eve off work when normally I would be expected to work as I work for a supermarket.So I'm not complaining at all.
Quote from: Zach on December 06, 2006, 10:12:55 AMQuote from: stauffenberg on December 06, 2006, 09:12:33 AMSo the dialysis patient has the grim choice of having either medically sub-standard dialysis in the U.S. with its attendant higher death rate but at evening hours that allow the patient to maintain a normal job, or to have high-standard dialysis in Europe with treatment times only between 10 AM and 4 PM, guaranteed to destroy your working capacity, even if they keep you healthy enough to be able to work!That's why there is home hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis.Not everyone can do PD or HHD.
Quote from: stauffenberg on December 06, 2006, 09:12:33 AMSo the dialysis patient has the grim choice of having either medically sub-standard dialysis in the U.S. with its attendant higher death rate but at evening hours that allow the patient to maintain a normal job, or to have high-standard dialysis in Europe with treatment times only between 10 AM and 4 PM, guaranteed to destroy your working capacity, even if they keep you healthy enough to be able to work!That's why there is home hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis.
This Christmas schedule -- convenient for the staff but cruel to the patients -- is part of the general problem that dialysis, which is the very life of the patients and merely a part of the life, the career, of the staff, is paradoxically run for the benefit of the staff rather than the patients. I have always found it disturbing that while dialysis is of a much higher technical quality in Europe than in America, because it is run by the government rather than for private profit, it is also much less convenient for the patients, since it is typically available only during the day, while the U.S. offers treatment in the evening and sometimes even overnight. This is a problem with European culture generally, which still operates on a 9 to 5 basis, with the stores closed on Sundays -- and in some countries, even closed Wednesday and Saturday afternoons as well! So the dialysis patient has the grim choice of having either medically sub-standard dialysis in the U.S. with its attendant higher death rate but at evening hours that allow the patient to maintain a normal job, or to have high-standard dialysis in Europe with treatment times only between 10 AM and 4 PM, guaranteed to destroy your working capacity, even if they keep you healthy enough to be able to work!
Quote from: AlasdairUK on December 07, 2006, 05:03:10 AMQuote from: Zach on December 06, 2006, 10:12:55 AMQuote from: stauffenberg on December 06, 2006, 09:12:33 AMSo the dialysis patient has the grim choice of having either medically sub-standard dialysis in the U.S. with its attendant higher death rate but at evening hours that allow the patient to maintain a normal job, or to have high-standard dialysis in Europe with treatment times only between 10 AM and 4 PM, guaranteed to destroy your working capacity, even if they keep you healthy enough to be able to work!That's why there is home hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis.Not everyone can do PD or HHD.I believe Zach was only mentioning the fact that there is PD and HHD options available to point out to stauffenberg that not everyone on dialysis HAS to be in-center hemo and deal with stuff like this. At least that's how I took it. Yes it is true not everyone can do HHD or PD and therefore need to do in-center hemo... however, it is my belief that the dialysis patient is not given all the options and such to make a decision on what they would rather do. (Not all dialysis patients, sorry let me clarify... most/some dialysis patients.) I was one of those patients who never even HEARD of PD ever in my life, even after being on hemo for over a yr... and my doctor never told me about it, only way I found out, was online in a dialysis message board forum kinda like this. Reason my doctor gave me for not telling me and offering it to me? He was honest, he told me because he runs 3 dialysis clinics he would rather put his patients on hemo to go to his center than on PD where he only see's us once a month. Money I tell you...
I'm not on in-center hemp anymore, but I wanted to comment anyways.Why does everyone feel bad for the nurses having to work during holidays.. or staying late or coming in early?It is there job... my dad works for Wal-mart, he has to work on holidays, and he is fine with that because it is his job. We do the holidays around his schedule... like for Thanksgiving, he had to work... so we ate Thanksgiving dinner when he got home around 530pm, when for 20 yrs we have always ate thanksgiving dinner around 1pm. Millions of people have to work holidays... dont feel bad for the dialysis nurses... it is their job... they get vacation time just like everyone else...