Dialysis Patients Help Themselves to Treatment
Shane
Waraki and Jake Wharewhiti are in no doubt learning to do
their own care at Waikato District Health Board’s Regional
Renal Centre in Hamilton has given them a quality of life
they could only dream of months ago.
As part of the
Assisted Care Programme, which was introduced in August
2013, they underwent a training programme, which then allows
them to reach a target of at least 80 per cent independence
with their haemodialysis treatment.
This may include
tasks such as setting the machines up, needling themselves
and putting themselves on and off the dialysis machine.
Previously these patients would have been 100 per
cent dependent on the nursing staff for all cares.
They still require some nursing care for the other 20
per cent of the time.
“I was eager to learn, it’s
in my nature. I do the needling myself now even though I was
initially apprehensive,” said Shane.
It gives him a
sense of well-being and achievement.
“I feel more in
control of my own health. My family, especially my wife,
think it is marvellous. She is my biggest supporter and she
likes it.”
Shane has been attending the Regional
Renal Centre for nearly three years – the last 14 months
for haemodialysis and 18 months before that on continuous
ambulatory peritoneal dialysis.
Being able to help
himself means he has more time with the grandchildren, can
attend their school sports and help them out with their
academic work.
His eldest grandchild recently asked
him what it was like so, after speaking to the dialysis
staff, Shane brought two of his grandchildren to the centre
to see for themselves.
“I’m teaching them now,
saying to them that what happened to me, I don’t want that
to happen to them.”
Jake is originally from
Christchurch and transferred to Hamilton after the 2011
earthquake.
He is about to head home having learned
how to look after most of his dialysis cares through the
Assisted Care Programme.
“You can set your own goals
as part of the programme, come in early and set it all up. I
now have much more control about when my dialysis starts on
allocated treatment days.”
Jake has made life-long
friends in the centre; it is a very social environment, he
says.
Plus he had his moment in the limelight at the
centre’s opening in November 2012 when he was part of a
boy band which sang for Health Minister Tony Ryall.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dKlxHsBQeCc
Charge
nurse manager Nicky Hagan said before the programme started
all patients in the in-centre dialysis unit were fully
dependent.
Self-treatment means people can have a more
independent, better quality life by fitting in the long
treatments – up to six hours three times a week - into
their routine, rather than having to attend set appointment
times. It also frees up space in specialist units for people
unable to manage at home or in the community.
”We
now have a group of patients who have some control and
independence over their treatment.
“The ultimate
aim of this programme is to see more patients go through to
home training and eventually go home to be fully independent
with their treatment although this is not realistic for all
patients in this programme,” she said.
The Waikato
renal service prides itself on the number of patients it has
doing home based dialysis with around 65 per cent achieving
this, which is above the national average.
There are a number of patients unable to do dialysis
at home for all kinds of reasons but can look after
themselves with the security and support of the dialysis
centre.
“If we can get them doing a component of
their own care to start with it might encourage them to go
home.
“It makes people more
independent.”
The Regional Renal Centre has a
capacity of 120 patients with the Assisted Care programme
taking potentially 40 of those patients.
Six of the
dialysis stations in the $7.6 million centre were not
commissioned after opening and it is these being used at no
extra cost.
Nicky saw an opportunity with using older
machines from patients’ homes where newer machines had
been put in. Waikato DHB has about 90 machines in people’s
homes throughout the Midland region.
The programme
started with three patients but one of them was too ill and
could not manage. The others trained over three
weeks.
Research shows that patients who take on more
responsibility for their own care have better health
outcomes including quality of life.
Nicky acknowledges
some patients find doing their own home dialysis daunting
but gain confidence by learning while in the centre. Some
people have a needle phobia and may not be able to have
treatment at home.
“I am always still amazed at our
patients who can line and prime the dialysis machine on
their own. Their families help particularly where there are
disability issues.”
Missing the life-sustaining
treatment is not an option.
Nurse Suzanne English, who
has been with the programme since the beginning and learned
how to train patients from the home training dialysis
nurses, says she has enjoyed it.
“We see the same
patients, they become our patients, and you go through
everything with them.
“They share everything with
us,” she said.
“A lot of these patients originally
didn’t want to be independent,” says Nicky.
The
centre sees 110 patients at the moment up from 85 when they
opened nearly two years ago.
When renal patients are
in the in-centre unit, there is a 1:3 nursing ratio. Under
the Assisted Care Programme it is a 1:5 nurse
ratio.
“This has allowed us to grow in patient
numbers without increasing nursing staff. It also
facilitates independence for patient care,” she
says.
They have trained 22 patients the past
year.
Kidney failure is a growing problem in New
Zealand with well over 2300 people now using dialysis.
Around 80-100 new patients in the Midland region, which
includes Waikato, Lakes, Bay of Plenty, Tairawhiti district
health boards, are expected to start dialysis in the next
year.
The demand for dialysis services in New Zealand
is predicted to grow at around 4-5 per cent each year over
the next 10 years.
ends