I think they should have a 5 days of week dialysis for patients that want it, for example my center could probably arrange this cause they are open 5 days a week, but you'd have to figure out availability of chairs, etc.
That's exactly why I'd like to go on PD but my stupid center won't listen. The nef there keeps saying, "Get a transplant."Well, I would but Transplants R Us are fresh out.
Dr. Paul Eggers of the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases said adjusting how dialysis is done "would require some fairly convincing evidence. I'm not sure this one study would be sufficient to change" standard practice.
But it would mean "a multibillion dollar change," said Friedman, who launched the country's first federally funded dialysis center.
If nephrologists know Dialysis three days a week is not sufficient enough,and patients know it is not efficient enough,and a study proves that it is not good enough,why is the life of kidney-patients on Dialysis not better protected ?
Could it be that having Dialysis at a Centre more than three times a week is too expensive ?
Why are doctors against everyone having a chance to have Dialysis at home ?
I don't do home hemo because I don't know anyone to be my partner and I can't do it alone cause I can't see so I don't think I better try my luck at it, lol.My former center wanted me to only do twice a week cause I was the only one that worked there and I was always the last patient out of there, they just didn't wanna stick around.
This drives me NUTS!Since 2001, when I first advocated for a Bill H.R.1759 to pay for more frequent dialysis, I have pointed to study after study showing that the two days off correlate to increased hospitalizations and deaths. This is entirely in the power of renal administrators to fix. All they have to do is stay open seven days a week and provide every other day schedules. There is nothing stopping this but the imagination of administrators.I am at a loss to explain why this isn't being done, but I suspect that the power of the business model enabled by the conventional dialysis schedule is more powerful than any study showing material harm to patients.