It's not the government.Some centers make those type of rules because staff members have forgotten to turn the UF back on.I'm not saying that's a good reason, but that's how a dialysis administrator looks at mistakes ... reduce possible human error.
My wife (the patient) and I are very proactive when it comes to her dialysis, she has been on Hemo for about a year, and I really wonder what shape she would be in if we had meekly accepted that orders of the Neph and the nurses. By watching her blood tests carefully we have been able to keep her tests within the "normal" range for quite awhile, if she starts showing signs of to much Potassium for example, we curb the items more strictly from the diet and bring it down, She was experiencing the dreaded headaches in the last half hour of treatment, and great resistance at having the UF flow stopped early, after a few confrontations with the Doc and staff the Neph finally wrote orders that this patient was to set the amount and the limits of her treatment, we still have to refer some nurses and techs to those orders when they try to out think our treatment plans for the day, but on the whole it has worked great for her, we now have found that setting UF draw for 3-1/2 hours and the last 30 minutes just filtering the blood has helped a lot, almost all the techs and nurses say the Fresenius machines cannot be set for that, but we have found it can if they set the machine for 3:30 UF time and start treatment process the RTD time can then be reset with an additional 30 minutes added. many of the "good" techs have commented that we are some of the few that take an active role in their treatment, I cannot understand not getting involved in your treatment, you are about the only one with the goal of bettering your overall health, not just getting the goal of getting through the work shift.......Tom
I think you meant 300ml/hour Adam? wow 300ml/minute... I think my fistula would colapse under that