Chances are your nephrologist will not even bring up the idea of transplant until much later, and by then you could have lost a couple of years on the waiting list making it that much more likely you will need dialysis before a transplant.
That is the effect the new rules have had at Madison because anyone who started dialysis before I got on the list moves ahead of me even if they were approved for the list three years after I was approved. The list keeps getting longer and those not on dialysis get pushed lower on the list.
Quote from: tigtink on February 28, 2017, 12:42:44 PMThat is the effect the new rules have had at Madison because anyone who started dialysis before I got on the list moves ahead of me even if they were approved for the list three years after I was approved. The list keeps getting longer and those not on dialysis get pushed lower on the list. This is the bit I don't understand. When I say that, I don't mean that I am doubting you, rather, I don't understand the new rules well enough to understand why/how someone can move ahead of you on the list even though you were listed three years before they were. Is it because of your blood type? Do dialysis patients on the list get to "jump the queue" and move ahead of those not yet on dialysis but are listed? Can anyone explain that? My apologies for my ignorance on this topic.
I don't understand the new rules well enough to understand why/how someone can move ahead of you on the list even though you were listed three years before they were.
One way to "jump ahead" (ie, start with extra points) is to be a long term dialysis patient who did not bother to get listed for the first few years of dialysis. This person is given credit for time since their first dialysis.
I found a study in the late 1990's that showed only 2.5% of all transplants were preemptive even then. It has to be even lower now. That suggests to me that the system and the doctors are not very efficient in helping people get listed early enough to minimize time on dialysis.