Dialysis, Distress, and Difficult Conversations: Living with a Kidney Transplant
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
- Theme 1: Managing ongoing fears of dialysis, distress and COVID-19
“… [sitting in the waiting room] so [I’m] scared… I mean I’m sat next to a guy here who’s got no leg. He’s in a wheelchair because of it. He’s on a dialysis machine. He has a kidney and it failed. I’ve got a guy over the other side, the same happened to him. He’s been on dialysis for five, six years. He has to come to hospital three times a week. I mean I am looking around and thinking [scared]… you know what I mean.”
“… my hair started to fall out and, as a woman, this really upsets me. I asked to stop [that] medication but I was told [my hair would] eventually stop [falling out] but [my hair] will never be the same again… to get me into the mind set of taking those tablets, [I] had to use my phone to remind me… I rarely forget now because my phone tells me morning and night…”
“It didn’t help the fact that, when I was literally due to go back to work, we got put in lockdown… Because then I became overly paranoid about leaving the house. I can’t leave the house. I can’t hurt the kidney. I don’t want to risk it. I don’t want to risk this virus. I don’t want to risk it. So going back to work last week, I’ve never suffered with panic attacks before or anxiety. And I was a blubbery mess just walking into the doors. Or even sat in the car park. I struggled really badly walking back into work last week.”
- Theme 2: Dealing with difficult conversations
“I think, prior to the [transplant] operation… the [doctor] asked you to ask people if they wanted to give you their kidney. Wow! I couldn’t ask anybody in my life. I couldn’t ask [anybody]. And I never did.”
“… Because my wife, for example, has now got one kidney. The information that she got was nonexistent. And she fell through a gap, I’m sure. However, there’s no literature, standard literature [location-specific] that said, you have donated. You’ve got one kidney now. You really do need to look after it. Because if it starts failing you haven’t got another one to take over capacity. The GP raised an issue about my wife’s kidney function, and she had to explain to him that she had donated her kidney to me… things like that weren’t helpful to the process.”
“… I sort of made this conscious decision to not go out with anybody. Because I thought it’s too much to take on for anybody to come in. I just was like very… I’ll deal with relationships and all that after my transplant.”
“We weren’t eligible for adoption because at any point this kidney could fail and I would be sick again… in the midst of it all, I never thought it was appropriate, with everything the doctors were doing for me, you know keeping me alive, to start talking about getting pregnant.”
“A big thing for me was, before the [transplant] operation, we were told that conceiving a child would be a struggle and difficult… as for life after transplant, I didn’t know what I wanted because I didn’t know what to expect.”
“I do think that there does need to be some kind of support network or support thing that needs to be there for the mental aspect of it. I think they are great about the diet side, they are great about the medication side, and all of that. It’s just the mental health of it. Just because you’ve had the transplant doesn’t mean that everything has been fixed, and sometimes you can unearth things that you didn’t even know were there sometimes, as well. It’s not being ungrateful to say that you are feeling down after your transplant… it’s just saying, I am still getting over what has happened to me.”
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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McKeaveney, C.; Noble, H.; Courtney, A.E.; Griffin, S.; Gill, P.; Johnston, W.; Maxwell, A.P.; Teasdale, F.; Reid, J. Dialysis, Distress, and Difficult Conversations: Living with a Kidney Transplant. Healthcare 2022, 10, 1177. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10071177
McKeaveney C, Noble H, Courtney AE, Griffin S, Gill P, Johnston W, Maxwell AP, Teasdale F, Reid J. Dialysis, Distress, and Difficult Conversations: Living with a Kidney Transplant. Healthcare. 2022; 10(7):1177. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10071177
Chicago/Turabian StyleMcKeaveney, Clare, Helen Noble, Aisling E. Courtney, Sian Griffin, Paul Gill, William Johnston, Alexander P. Maxwell, Francesca Teasdale, and Joanne Reid. 2022. "Dialysis, Distress, and Difficult Conversations: Living with a Kidney Transplant" Healthcare 10, no. 7: 1177. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10071177
APA StyleMcKeaveney, C., Noble, H., Courtney, A. E., Griffin, S., Gill, P., Johnston, W., Maxwell, A. P., Teasdale, F., & Reid, J. (2022). Dialysis, Distress, and Difficult Conversations: Living with a Kidney Transplant. Healthcare, 10(7), 1177. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10071177