. One very positive point in using a Dialysis-Centre is the fact that the nurses and doctors are always there and can be approached at all times for whatever question, blood-check-up etc., whereas being at home there are two non-medical people who could get into all sorts of medical difficulties i.e. how much weight to take off/low blood-pressure or hypertension etc. etc.
Quote from: kristina on July 23, 2020, 08:22:01 AM. One very positive point in using a Dialysis-Centre is the fact that the nurses and doctors are always there and can be approached at all times for whatever question, blood-check-up etc., whereas being at home there are two non-medical people who could get into all sorts of medical difficulties i.e. how much weight to take off/low blood-pressure or hypertension etc. etc. I doubt the MDs are always there and if they are, they are probably not assigned to the clinic floor and would only be summoned in a real emergency.If you are not up to dealing with the tech stuff of the machine, how to read, interpret and use numbers (water off, weight, bp shifts during dialysis) home hemo is not for you. But if you are determined and not a member of the double digit club [IQ < 100] you can get pretty good at it. A chest cath poses significant additional risks. First off, there is the issue of properly cleaning and packaging it up to prevent infection.Get the clamping order wrong on a home hemo machine or bloodline and you can have a bloody mess to clean up (or die if you don't correct it in short order). Make that error with a chest cath and you can have an embolism that goes from your heart to your brain and leaves you disabled for life.
As I have mentioned before, I am very grateful to all the medical care I have received in “my” Dialysis-Centre. The medics there certainly helped me a lot to be kept well enough for my transplant to “come along”...
. Also, the information you provide seems to differ from the information we have received about different dialysis-survival-methods. For example, we were told that there might be a financial difference between the “running costs” of a patient who uses a Dialysis-Centre where medics are present & approachable at all times ... and the “running costs” of Home-Dialysis. Using a Dialysis-Centre seems to have been my best survival option, especially since my husband and I are not medically inclined.As I have mentioned before, I am very grateful to all the medical care I have received in “my” Dialysis-Centre. The medics there certainly helped me a lot to be kept well enough for my transplant to “come along”...
since you are a new IHD-owner ... ?
... I only mentioned you as IHD-owner, because it says so. Above your avatar and directly underneath your name it says you are: Administrator/Owner/Elite Member...
P.S. How does it work out to keep IHD going financially?
I remember when my husband wanted to donate one of his kidneys and was diagnosed with cancer during his work-up.
Vein mapping and fistula surgery delayed by 3 weeks until I am better. I don't like but I guess things happen that way
(Looking forward to a real shower, can't get the chest catheter wet)