So just for grins plugger, do you know the outcome of the suit DaVita filed against PPN? As a patient there, I'm curious just where that stands. And I've never had anything but stellar care from the folks at Liberty, would unhesitatingly recommend them to anyone needing kidney care.
So just for grins plugger, do you know the outcome of the suit DaVita filed against PPN?
And I've never had anything but stellar care from the folks at Liberty, would unhesitatingly recommend them to anyone needing kidney care.
if the liberty center in castle rock did nocturnal, i'd be there in a heart beat! there is hope the do nocturnal in colorado springs.
many believe that blood transfusions in the unit are a safe practice'..
Quote from: thegrammalady on October 07, 2011, 04:04:37 PMif the liberty center in castle rock did nocturnal, i'd be there in a heart beat! there is hope the do nocturnal in colorado springs.I seem to recall Home Dialysis Central keeps a list of who does slow nocturnal in Colorado and elsewhere. Hey, maybe HDC could give some tips for getting slow noc. at your clinic! Don't know, just off the top of my head. I do know they put out out some nice postcards, was putting them on windshields at clinics around here, there for awhile.
I was wondering, do they encourage more time on the machine? Do they do reuse? Thanks!
Is the longer treatment time the only variable that increases survival in other countries? I understood that in many countries they have much stricter criteria for even starting dialysis. So the sickest people who would die sooner don't get dialysis. Whereas here in the US, if granny is 85 with heart problems and the family wants dialysis she gets it. But then granny dies in 3 months because she was dying before dialysis started. And that helps skew mortality rates.Not that I'm disputing that more dialysis is better. Just that statistics don't always tell the whole story.
I'll have to do a little research. I was sure I read that in Italy they only let the healthiest ones have dialysis, not those with lots of other problems. I'll have to think where I read it. Darn brain like a sieve.
Quote from: jeannea on October 20, 2011, 02:43:34 PMI'll have to do a little research. I was sure I read that in Italy they only let the healthiest ones have dialysis, not those with lots of other problems. I'll have to think where I read it. Darn brain like a sieve.That's what is so great about the internet - can always refresh your memory. Italy was specifically cited in the ProPublica article as having superior outcomes to the US, apparently due in large part to the fact that they are able to intervene earlier, before the individual begins to deteriorate. Intervention comes earlier because people don't have to worry about the cost of preventative care under a socialized system, and so they do not put off going to the doctor the way many are forced to do here. The article referenced 3 Italian "senior citizens" who had been dialysing together for years. I think it's difficult for some to admit that capitalism+healthcare=failure, so perhaps you read an article with someone trying to find fault with other systems, but I would be surprised if it were true. I do think that it makes sense, if someone is beyond any real help, to not put them through the ordeal of dialysis, but from everything I've read, the recommendation to forego dialysis in these instances would be made in the US as much as anywhere else.