Yep, try not to dwell on the past.Agree about young and healthy. Full of life ahead. Damn it.Sluff, why is the picture has error. Too sexy??
Do most of you feel life is fragile when you depend on the machine to sustain life? The patient really does not know when is his last day on this earth. Infections, cardiact arrest, seizure, and etc.,
Yes life is very fragile and precious so we should all try to treasure each day with our loved ones since one never know........BDpoe,It is so hard to fanthom that they can refuse treatment.....that is even worse than sentencing a criminal to death.......Now I am more afraid than ever since I don't want my husband doing PD and I don't really want to do home hemo either since if anything goes wrong, there is no medical treatment.........good thing he is not at that point yet.....How are they treating you at your clinic?
Quote from: tweetykiss on June 06, 2007, 04:14:13 PMYes life is very fragile and precious so we should all try to treasure each day with our loved ones since one never know........BDpoe,It is so hard to fanthom that they can refuse treatment.....that is even worse than sentencing a criminal to death.......Now I am more afraid than ever since I don't want my husband doing PD and I don't really want to do home hemo either since if anything goes wrong, there is no medical treatment.........good thing he is not at that point yet.....How are they treating you at your clinic?I was one who was unjustly labled a problem patient and the word was passed on to every clinic and Neph I applied toin three counties within 50 miles of my home. My only problem was that I complained about unsanitary conditionsand mistreatment by some of the staff. Even the ESRD network did very little in trying to find the truth.So all the clinics refused me and left me to die or move which I could not do or afford.I was stunned. I wrote urgent pleas for humanitarian assistance which were ignored.I found a suppossed religious hospital that took me as an outpatient thus saving my life.Things were great the first year and a half. I was an easy to care for patient with no problems.Until they removed my catheter and started sticking me and some personell changes.When I started innocently questioning skill levels, qualifications, procedures to people I thought weremy friends everything wernt to hell.Now most days it seems like they want me to go away. Seems like the charge nurse considers mea pain in the butt and either cant do the job or is deliberately trying every way possible to make life difficult.Once in a while I get a good nurse who takes care of me in a very professional manner.The rest of the time it's not too good and frightening. And this is the best care available!it's once never endiing crisis........bd
Quote from: st789 on June 06, 2007, 12:53:12 PMDo most of you feel life is fragile when you depend on the machine to sustain life? The patient really does not know when is his last day on this earth. Infections, cardiact arrest, seizure, and etc.,I can also get killed crossing the street, by a stray bullet, by a speeding car, by anything that life or God throws at you.I can't think about that, I'm too busy living right now to think about those things.
Life is precious not fragile. At least thats how I have always tried to think about it.
BDpoe,They are just so full of cr*p.........now I am going to assume you didn't have family or relatives who could provide your aid with getting legal services for this....can this sort of malarkey be reported to AMA? They say customers and patients always right but then we never are......that is just pathectic how they mistreat you and and then ban you.......You could maybe so a malpractice suit with an attorney who only charges a percent of what you get......I just know this has to be cr*p.....
Since i was young and was told i had one kidney i tried like hell to take care of it. In the back of my mind i figured that would be how i would die. Of course no one really knows for sure. I have lived my life like today is my last. I have made many bad decisions but i have lived it my way. Sounds like a song. Since being back on dialysis the stench of death has come back. The chances are greater. My center is dirty but i go on the third shift Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. I seem to get the following shifts filth. I also see a nurse and two techs who have worked fifteen hours or so. I have been a patient who questions everything. I am sure my folder has a big red "Non-Compliant" on it. I know when you aren't a good little patient they will send you to the Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday shift where the patients don't live too long. I have found the more i fight the more they ignore. One time i was going down for a test and i wanted to be sure i was put out for it. I didn't want to feel the pain from it. I was in a operating room and waiting for the shot that would put me under and they tried to do it without it. I put up such a fuss they stooped. I went back to my room and was told by the nurse they wanted to inject me with Thorazine. I put a stop to that. There is really not much we can do if we take them to court. Those cases are so expensive. When i had the chest catheter i went through seven of them each time they would load me up with Gentamicician. After about a year and a half of this i started to walk like i was drunk. Swaying side to side. I went through a few doctors and a few test only to have a ENT tell me my inner ear had been damaged from too many dosages of Gentamicican. He told me there wasn't anything i could do about it. I was told they had given me the wrong dosage. I found another patient who had the same thing at my center. It's my word against there's. There was a man at my clinic who was deemed a "Non Compliant" patient. He went to the Tuesday shift and died. I'm not afraid to die. I don't have what allot of people have. I don't make waves. I try and be the good boy they want me to be.