Stu,I don't think this is about particular instances of technician's mistakes or patient's indiscretions. It's about the brutality of dialysis as it's delivered today. Three times a week for 3-4 hours. It's brutal on the body. It's damaging in the long-term. But instead of being blunt about these facts, the publications that are meant to "educate" the patient tend to take an attitude that if the patient's body is being brutalized (pressure drops, cramping, etc.) it's because the patient isn't following orders.The real correction needs to come to the system that's delivering patient-care, not the patient - who is only doing what a human would ordinarily do: drink when they're thirsty.
The real correction needs to come to the system that's delivering patient-care, not the patient - who is only doing what a human would ordinarily do: drink when they're thirsty.
I live in Australia, and my in centre haemo experience was pretty good. I was a pretty non-compliant patient, as I mentioned above, so I fully knew it was my fault when I felt like crap.I don't have any experience with US style dialysis, so I can't comment on its brutality but I will say this; when the government hands over the primary care of chronically ill patients to a for profit company, the outcomes are never going to be as good as if the centres were run by a body that didn't have to worry about shareholders and profits.QuoteThe real correction needs to come to the system that's delivering patient-care, not the patient - who is only doing what a human would ordinarily do: drink when they're thirsty.I'm not sure what to say to this one, I as much as anyone knows how much of a bitch that fluid restriction is (try getting through an Australian summer on one litre a day when part of the culture is to drink beer all the time). I just had to learn the lesson the hard way that dialysis is a much smoother process when you don't come in carrying 4 litres.This is part of the reason I have chosen PD as this transplant I have fails...
Most, if not all, of these side effects could be avoided if patients had access to more dialysis. It is not the patients' fault that clinics are closed on Sundays or that more clincs don't offer true nocturnal dialysis. And maybe if there was more support of home dialysis and more home D nurses, more patients could benefit from more dialysis and they wouldn't be bothered by these classic in-clinic D side effects.Why can't the big corporations like DaVita and Fresenius act like the "job creators" they're supposed to be and open more clinics (creating construction jobs), order more supplies and machines (supporting manufacturing) and employ more nurses/techs/etc (creating more healthcare jobs) and let people have more dialysis? Then you wouldn't have this argument over whose fault it is if you're fluid overloaded.
Im on PD and before my doctor wanted me to get a fistula. THANK GoD I did NOT listen to my doctor on getting a fistula because that would be one useless fistula!