What helps me a lot, is, that I always fasten my cath with a medical tape and that keeps the cath securely in its place and when I go for my next dialysis-session the medical tape is carefully taken off and after dialysis the cath is securely fastened with the medical tape again.
Quote from: Xplantdad on January 31, 2018, 11:42:09 AMThank you Kristina. Holly is doing very well now. Thank you Xplantdad for the update. I am very pleased to read that Holly is doing very well.Thanks again and all the best and good-luck-wishes from Kristina.
Thank you Kristina. Holly is doing very well now.
Thanks for the reply, Kristina! Very interesting!
Quote from: kristina on February 02, 2018, 07:25:41 AMQuote from: Xplantdad on January 31, 2018, 11:42:09 AMThank you Kristina. Holly is doing very well now. Thank you Xplantdad for the update. I am very pleased to read that Holly is doing very well.Thanks again and all the best and good-luck-wishes from Kristina. thank you for asking
Quote from: kristina on February 02, 2018, 11:15:16 AMWhat helps me a lot, is, that I always fasten my cath with a medical tape and that keeps the cath securely in its place and when I go for my next dialysis-session the medical tape is carefully taken off and after dialysis the cath is securely fastened with the medical tape again.You dress your site yourself? What is "medical tape"?
The medical gloves are "clean", not "sterile". Sterile gloves come in sealed individual packs, and there is an extensive ritual to putting them on without contamination.As to medical tape - several types - paper, paper w/extra sticky adhesive, silk. The later rips off the top layer of my skin, so I use paper extra sticky (3M Micropore Plus)
I was told the reason an infection at the catheter sire is dangerous is because the catheter itself leads straight into the heart.
Hello Simon,the medical gloves all the nurses use at "my" dialysis center are sterile and come in sealed individual packs and you are quite right there is an extensive ritual to putting them on without contamination and all the nurses always disinfect their hands completely and carefully before they proceed to open the individual pack and put the sterile gloves on
I have never seen any clinic use anything other than the bulk packed clean but not sterile gloves.
Quote from: kristina on February 04, 2018, 03:41:49 AMHello Simon,the medical gloves all the nurses use at "my" dialysis center are sterile and come in sealed individual packs and you are quite right there is an extensive ritual to putting them on without contamination and all the nurses always disinfect their hands completely and carefully before they proceed to open the individual pack and put the sterile gloves onI am impressed.I have been to about a dozen clinics for hemo (I use NxStage at home, but do not haul it on trips), mostly Fresenius but a few DaVita oin various parts of the US, both as a catheter and fistula patient.I have never seen any clinic use anything other than the bulk packed clean but not sterile gloves.What center do you use, and what company runs it? It is interesting to see one exercising this extra level of care.
NHS runs clinics and wards and only use sterile gloves on catheters and lines
Quote from: cassandra on May 02, 2018, 10:44:03 AMNHS runs clinics and wards and only use sterile gloves on catheters and linesAre you talking about the real, individually packed sterile gloves that must be laid out on a sterile field and applied using the sterile glove ritual?
There's a ritual? That's so funny. My clinic uses the boxed, sterile gloves also.
In Britain the rule tends to be: Use the wrapped, sterile gloves when touching wounds, catheter's, kneedling, etc to prevent your germs infecting the patient. All other time use the boxed (non sterile) gloves to touch patients to stop them infecting you!