Which is why, in discussions with people on "civilized countries" and which ones would you live in? I never include the U.S. (sorry guys!! )
A party at 90 for going on dialysis? What a crock!
More important is the statistic (from a series of articles published on dialysis in the New York Times in 1996) that the death rate among dialysis patients in U.S. for-profit centers was 26% per year, thanks to the cost cutting in treatment to generate greater profits for the dialysis companies, while the death rate in the dialysis centers run by socialized medicine in other countries ranged from 9% per year in Japan to 13% in Canada. Significantly, the death rate at U.S. not for profit dialysis centers was the same as that in countries with socialized medicine. The U.S. government, which conceives of itself essentially as the agent of capitalist interests rather than of the people it purportedly represents, is deliberately lax in inspecting and enforcing compliance with medicare rules governing the standards of dialysis care at for-profit centers, since this helps the capitalists make more money by cutting corners on treatment, and so what if that means more sick people have to die?
Hey RoseMy father was on it for about two years, started at 74 I think but they tried to get him on hemo as soon as possible because at our father's age there is a much higher risk of infection and at their age they have more of a battle fighting the infection. Also, they really have to be pretty responsible with their own treatment and in my Dad's case he got an infection and he forgot how to use his machine so it was straight onto Hemo but I have to say, I think he did a lot better on CAPD. It seemed to suit him a lot better.