I'm sure there is substantial difference between dialysis and health care in Europe as opposed to what we have here in the US. I think studies done in this country would be much more pertinent than those done abroad.
Medical progress is glacially slow, and anyone who thinks there is a major difference between renal medicine today and renal medicine even 20 years ago should try my 'comparative medical journal' technique
... The bias is completely on the side proceeding to renal transplant here in America. Japan on the other hand has the best ESRD mortality figures with a very low rate of renal transplant. Again, for some, especially those with ESRD due to diabetes, that may be the best choice, yet for those with no other comorbidities, the choice of daily dialysis is a very viable option. This is just my own humble opinion.
... no one would prefer the much worse prospets of complications of dialysis over those of renal transplant ...
That is still BS. I would rather be on dialysis than be dead. Duh. My life is not what it was before, but we do pretty much the same activities. As a matter of fact, my kids think I am the bomb and my husband does too! I waterski, wollerblade, walk my dogs, play with my kids, work at our office and work at home. I am never surprised by your negative comments and statistics Stauffenberg but just as in society you cannot group all people into one catagory, neither can you group all dislysis patients into the horrible hell hole you make it out to be. Leave me out of that stat thank you very much. I am glad you are well on your transplant, and someday soon I hope to be too. But, not all of us are that depressed or sick.
While acknowledging that there are people out there who are overwhelmed and bitter about their lot in life, for me, I am just happy to be alive, able to work and able to enjoy life's every day beauties. I have technology and scientific research to thank for that. I feel that I am living in life's bonus round and I am grateful for that. (I save my bitterness for politics)
One simple statistic speaks volumes: of those patients on dialysis who are in the normal working age, only 30% actually do work. Look at Kevno's eloquent description of how he cannot get his life together between the constant cascade of hemodialysis treatments. Look at the thread where people describe all that they have lost on dialysis. Just look at the title of this entire message board. The situation for dialysis patients is truly bleak.When I was a university student in Germany part of my training required me to conduct statistical field work at a dialysis center. That was in 1985, and I got to know exactly what the patient were going through then in every detail. When I first became a dialysis patient myself and endured that treatment form 1996 to 2005, I experienced for myself every single negative aspect of dialysis I had personally observed and heard patients complaining about twenty years before. While there is always some minor tinkering to improve the experience of dialysis patients in miniscule ways, the fact is that the situation has remained essentially the same for a whole generation now. From 1942 to today, the problem with dialysis has stayed constant: The only method to allow the patient to avoid death is so intrusive on his time, energy, freedom, and health, that it destroys the quality of the life it is extending.