How comfy are you unit's dialysis chairs and how frequently do they replace or mend them?I attend a very small unit with 5 chairs!!! which are about 7-8 years old (from when unit first opened) and we generally sit in same place but last session on Friday, the chairs had been moved about for some reason.And my chair was broken, you can't raise the foot rest up and down. Sounds a minor point but for short people like memeans you keep slipping down the chair, leaving your spine unsupported and making my shoulder (on fistula arm) ache...When I asked when it was going to be fixed I got very short shrift... a whenever answer.But it is uncomfortable. Four and a half hours plus in an uncomfortable chair three times a week is not acceptable.Especially as it gave me awful backache afterwards.They don't like it when I moan or complain ... but dialysis is difficult enough without making it worse and with unsympathetic nursestelling me how privileged I am to have dialysis... and how hard they work and stuff that riles me,,,Come Monday, if the same chair is at my station I am going to refuse to sit in it. If they argue with me or get funny, I'm walking out.I am tired of being treated as if I should see dialysis as a do as your told situation... I shall walk out and go and see the manager in the Main Unit...
Quote from: cattlekid on August 10, 2014, 08:53:29 AMI agree...the broken chair is unsafe. What if you would need to be put flat because your blood pressure was dropping? I would refuse the chair and if they refused to fix it, I would work my way up the chain, including the ESRD network.She's in the UK, therefore under the NHS. Not easy working "up the ladder" under socialized medicine.
I agree...the broken chair is unsafe. What if you would need to be put flat because your blood pressure was dropping? I would refuse the chair and if they refused to fix it, I would work my way up the chain, including the ESRD network.
Ask them if they would like the "privilage" of needing dialysis.
That same nurse today, forgot to do my tapes, forgot to put seaweed on before gauze at end, put the wrong set of lines on someone's else's machine
Quote from: Sugarlump on August 11, 2014, 06:23:28 AM That same nurse today, forgot to do my tapes, forgot to put seaweed on before gauze at end, put the wrong set of lines on someone's else's machine Please do you mind explaining what that is?
That IS not a privilege that's like saying I am lucky to have kidney failure!!!!!
And to say that the attitude is that you have to endure whatever is slung your way because it is "free" is a lot of bullshit. There is nothing free in this world!
Prime timer, you are talking complete bulls*** about treatment in the UK. I have experience renal healthcare on both sides of the pond. I never had one person that a I dealt with referring to any for of NHS healthcare as a privilege, , and it sounds as if this member of staff has an attitude problem just as staff do in units in the US. People pay for their healthcare in the IK via their taxes and national insurance payments. We just don't pay it at point of service as it is done in the US. Your comment sounds like it comes from someone who has swallowed the right-wing clap-trap about the British healthcare system, whilst they fail to mention the bits that don't fit their arguement. I do not wish to turn this thread into a political discussion, but your comment really touched a nerve.