In Canada, the government would rather save money for the taxpayer than provide convenient dialysis centers, so when one Senator who was on dialysis had to do a lot of her work in Toronto, where there was no surplus dialysis capacity to accommodate her, the government had to pay to fly her back and forth between Toronto and her home dialysis unit in Ottawa three times a week!
In some areas of Europe, in-center hemodialysis is available only between the hours of 9 AM and 5 PM, for the convenience of the employees, who want a normal work day, and the employers, who do not want to pay overtime rates. That this schedule means that the patient cannot have a normal life, or will have enormous difficulty holding any ordinary job, does not seem to interest anyone in power.
The 9-5 working day at dialysis centers I was talking about is what I often encountered in Europe, not in Canada, where the hours are usually 7 AM to 11 PM. Dialysis is far better overall in Canada than in the U.S., since there is no profit-motive to encourage dialysis suppliers to cut corners on the services they are required to provide their patients. For this reason, the death rate on dialysis in Canada is 13% per year, while in the U.S. it is 24% a year.
About twenty-five to thirty years ago there still was a shortage of dialysis machines, staff, and stations, even in industrialized countries, but this has not been the case for a long time now. Since then, anyone and everyone can have dialysis if they want it, as long as they are in an industrialized country. As a student I did statistical research in a dialysis center in Germany in the mid-1980s; and I was a dialysis patient myself in the United States, Canada, and England from the mid-1990s to 2005, and I can say from my experience that the patient population in all four countries, three with socialized medicine, one without, was identical, having a large share of people with multiple disabilities, extreme old-age, gross obesity, total dementia, etc.