My father, died July 16, 2010 after a horrific dialysis treatment. He was 91 and one month. He lived each and every moment, no matter how bad he felt to life's fullest. Dialysis was hard on him, as well as his experiencing major retaliation from staff who did not accept the fact, or buy into the fact, that patients often are educated and can catch staff mistakes and prevent problems, even death. He was certainly a testimony. Well educated and very vigilant when staff administered his treatment. Patients can be as educated as they want but unless staff are understanding that the patient IS the center of care and that the patient IS part of the team and has a right to bring forth concerns related to care without retaliation.Roberta Mikles BA RN opinions ofAdvocates4QualitySafePatientCarewww.qualitysafepatientcare.com uncompensated advocates, non connected to the industry, and not beholding to the industry
Quote from: dialysisadvocate on August 08, 2011, 05:39:05 PMMy father, died July 16, 2010 after a horrific dialysis treatment. He was 91 and one month. He lived each and every moment, no matter how bad he felt to life's fullest. Dialysis was hard on him, as well as his experiencing major retaliation from staff who did not accept the fact, or buy into the fact, that patients often are educated and can catch staff mistakes and prevent problems, even death. He was certainly a testimony. Well educated and very vigilant when staff administered his treatment. Patients can be as educated as they want but unless staff are understanding that the patient IS the center of care and that the patient IS part of the team and has a right to bring forth concerns related to care without retaliation.Roberta Mikles BA RN opinions ofAdvocates4QualitySafePatientCarewww.qualitysafepatientcare.com uncompensated advocates, non connected to the industry, and not beholding to the industryGood for you! Good to know! I'm sorry about your father