I will not take six weeks off of work to train for dialysis. This is a ridiculous expectation on their part!
Petey, I believe that what you regard as 'errors' in my account of my personal experience while I was on home hemodialysis has to do with the fact that you are comparing your experience with NxStage with my experience with a conventional Fresenius dialysis machine placed in the home. NxStage was not available in Canada when I was on home hemodialysis in 1996. Needless to say, I stayed with that form of treatment only a short while, mainly because it interfered with my psychological coping mechanism for surviving on dialysis. For me, in-center hemodialysis was just a ritual which required me to sit in a given chair for four and a half hours while nurses ran around me doing one thing or another, and while I read books. I used to think to myself: so what's the problem with having to sit in this chair reading rather than having to sit in a different chair at home and read? But that whole intellectual strategy was defeated when I had to involve myself actively in the whole treatment process which, as I have said before, was for me like being a condemned man being forced to build the scaffold that would hang him. You don't want to have to spend years of your life staring at the photograph of the person who will some day kill you, or taking apart and putting together the car that will one day run you over and end your life. In the same way, you don't want to spend every day of your life fiddling with the machine that symbolizes the fact that disease has destroyed your chance of a normal life.
People who are caregivers, though they SEE dialysis first hand, have no idea of the horrors we as patients may see dialysis and its machines, no matter what kind of front we put up.
I have been thinking about these posts for a couple of hours. I must speak up as the one with ESRD, not the caregiver. Joe Paul wasn't trying to offend anyone. We, as the patients, need a safe place to vent, to share, to complain or just compare. My husband is loving, caring and worries about me all the time. But, late at night, when it is dark and quiet, he can't know the fear, the pain, the disappointment, that I have. He does all he can, but in the end, it is still me who has kidney failure. We love our caregivers and know they make our lives easier. I wouldn't wish this disease on anyone and I would rather it be me than my husband. My sister-in-law died of breast cancer. Her loving husband never left her side. He was the perfect caregiver and support. But, Lisa died and Dick still lives. He is heartbroken, but is going about rebuilding his life. He knew she was in pain and very worried, but it wasn't him. There is a difference. Joe Paul is one of the sweetest members and always gives encouragement to others. So, understand, we need to beable to scream somethimes that unless you have ESRD, you can't know the full impact of the disease. That doesn't take away from the incredible bond you have with your spouses. Your husbands are very fortunate to have you. I know this post if off topic. Most of this belongs in the "caregivers" section.
No doubt the main bottleneck is the extremely limited number of machines available for home hemodialysis. Another problem for some people is that they have to have the water pipes leading into their house modernized to allow for safe hemodialysis, and this can be too expensive for some people. I had to pay $3400 to have the old pipes leading from the water mains to my house replaced before I could start home hemodialysis.There are further subjective factors that make people not want this option. They are forced to deal with dialysis constantly, rather than just three days a week, since they endure treatments for six nights and then have to clean the machine on the seventh day, so the well-known phenomenon of 'dialysis fatigue,' usually found in PD patients, begins to set in. Some patients are afraid of the danger of lines coming loose or some other emergency occurring outside of a hospital setting where it could be corrected in time to prevent death. There is also the problem of space, since one room is taken up as a sterile area for the machine, while another room is wasted for storage of supplies. The need to be in charge of the logistics of getting the dialysis supplies ordered, checked, and stored can also be draining. Even with all this effort at home, the patient still has to go to the hospital or clinic periodically for certain types of blood tests and for medical appointments, both of which would otherwise have been much more conveniently handled during the in-center hemodialysis sessions. Finally there is the psychological stress of being a condemned man having to build his own scaffold, and the patient has to be prepared to have his face rubbed every day in the fact of the disease and the machine which have ruined his life, since he is much more intimately involved in the details of his medical tragedy when he has to do his own dialysis. The difference for some people between home dialysis and in-center is like that between doing your own housework and having a professional maid do it for you: why would you want to do your own dialysis if professionals are available to take care of it for you, while all you have to do is show up at the dialysis center, sit down, and read for four hours? There is also the added psychological stress of having the machine come into your own home, rather than being able to confine that horror at some place away from where you live. The feeling that your life has been invaded and taken over by the disease discourages many people from this treatment, despite its better medical outcome.
(more in the caregivers section.)
Quote from: aharris2 on March 03, 2008, 03:31:21 PM(more in the caregivers section.) ...or not. That thread has been locked
They will not work with me for that time frame. It has to be in their time frame. How convenient is that for me?
Some more thoughts: http://www.nephronline.com/nephnews/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2358&Itemid=136Report from Orlando Symposium pushes the HHD buttonMark E. Neumann, Executive Editor, Nephrology News & Issues....
Also in the news articles section
Quote from: okarol on March 04, 2008, 10:36:16 AMAlso in the news articles section Opps! Sorry about that.
Good thoughts on that other thread, Plugger! I think it all boils down to what one person there said, "Knowledge is POWER."