"Have you visited many hemodialysis units in the U.S.?" PeckamSitting in a chair, virtually strapped in for four hours, unable to get the attention of anyone except a "tech", discussing your medical problems with a doctor when he/she comes around once a week where anyone can listen in, time getting there and back, surly nurses, etc. It's all in the record of my ongoing posts.Now that I am free of dialysis, I owe someone something. Although I have finished chemotherapy, I am about to enter the radiation phase - about four or five weeks. My wish is not to walk away from what I understand as exploitive profit-oriented dialysis centers and do something for the patients beyond the dialysis center I was at. It took me only one minute to find a photograph on the internet of dialysis in a better enviroment than I was in. I took Peckham's comment as a challenge of credentials, the first step towards a non-productive agrument. I am not a social worker. I am the guy who gets it done, which is what I did for a loving.
The question that begs to be answered is, why are most dialysis centers more like a large garage than the more positive atmosphere of most Infusion Centers?
I can see that I don't belong here.
MM why should dialysis providers be held accountable for dialyzor's quality of life? Is it in our best interests for them to be help accountable? Wouldn't it be better to hold them accountable in the same way an infusion center is held accountable? An infusion center needs to get the job done well without over burdening those who need their services. Their job is to minimize the hardship their service inherently entails. To minimize the treatment burden.
Quote from: Bill Peckham on April 26, 2012, 08:54:02 PMMM why should dialysis providers be held accountable for dialyzor's quality of life? Is it in our best interests for them to be help accountable? Wouldn't it be better to hold them accountable in the same way an infusion center is held accountable? An infusion center needs to get the job done well without over burdening those who need their services. Their job is to minimize the hardship their service inherently entails. To minimize the treatment burden.I don't think that dialysis providers should be held accountable for a dialyzor's quality of life, but I don't think that the way that treatment is provided should detract from it, either. Having untrained staff who can't cannulate a banana would detract from one's quality of life. Having untreated anemia would detract from one's quality of life. I don't know anything about infusion centers, but my gut tells me that what goes on in infusion centers is not quite as complicated as the process of dialysis. I may be wrong, but I'm guessing that much more can go wrong during a dialysis treatment and that the results of such errors have a higher likelihood of resulting in hospitalization or death.I agree that dialysis centers should minimize the treatment burden, but again, they shouldn't add to it by poor anti-infection practices or rapid filtration rates that literally break your heart and eventually kill you. Minimize the treatment burden without minimizing the number of patients' days on earth.
Does the depletion of a person's volition lead to a decline in the quality of that person's life?