Hemodiealysis (222.p.1)

Page 99

MENLO PARK » JO-ANNE Mark is a very unusual dialysis patient — Most patients get pretty depleted from dialysis, but Mark rarely even naps and seems more energetic after the session than before it. Except for favoring his left arm from the needles. Susan was kind of like that too, but she seemed somewhat depressed. I think she moved up to Redding. I hope she likes it up there: I hear the redwood trees are magnificent. Mark also asks _a lot_ of questions. Not questions about his treatment, which is pretty normal although lots of patients just trust their doctors are doing the right thing. Social questions like “How are you doing?”, “How is your husband handling chemo?”, and the like. It is bizarre that he remembers that my husband is in chemo treatment, let alone that is how he starts a conversation with me. In spite of having a machine pulling blood out of him while we talk, he is worried that I might be having a rough week. He is engaging like a salesman, except he isn’t selling anything. Asking a lot of questions though. Today he asked how people pay for dialysis, and whether some people stop coming because they can’t pay. In general dialysis is paid for by medical plans or Medicare. It costs most insurers about five hundred dollars per session although Medicare has a three hundred dollar rate that is publicly documented — transparency is an advantage of social medicine. I have never heard of anyone paying for it out of their pocket. Whether three or five, when you multiply by more than fifteen thousand, you get a very expensive yearly cost. If you aren’t covered by medical plans or Medicare, different states have different levels of Medicaid coverage. Even with Medicare, transportation to and from a clinic may not be covered, in which case you can theoretically get dialysis but may practically be unable to get to dialysis. It would be like getting free take-out meals from a place you can’t reach. “Ironic”, as Alanis Morissette might say.

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Epilogue : Hemodienamics

2min
pages 171-176

Venice » Mark

2min
pages 167-170

Donations » Dr. A

1min
pages 165-166

Doctors (2) » Dr. A

2min
pages 163-164

Doctors » Dr. A

3min
pages 159-162

Requests » Dr. A

3min
pages 155-158

Exodus (3) » Sandra

1min
pages 153-154

Exodus » Patrick

1min
pages 147-148

Exodus (2) » Sandra

1min
pages 149-150

Exodus » Sandra

6min
pages 141-144

Requests » Mark

1min
pages 151-152

Exodus » Mark

2min
pages 139-140

Exodus » Bruce

1min
pages 145-146

Bishop » John

3min
pages 135-138

Safe Houses » Mark

3min
pages 133-134

Defending Boardwalk » Ron

1min
pages 131-132

Defending Boardwalk » Mark

5min
pages 127-130

The Neighborhood » Carl

4min
pages 123-126

350 Acres

2min
pages 117-120

Negotiations » Dr. A

2min
pages 121-122

Communication

3min
pages 113-116

July 5th

4min
pages 109-112

The Second Convoy

3min
pages 105-108

Razors

2min
pages 103-104

Menlo Park » Jo-Anne

2min
pages 99-100

Sunnyvale » Dr. A

1min
pages 101-102

Convoy

8min
pages 91-96

Contact Lists » Mark

1min
pages 97-98

Ignorance

1min
pages 89-90

It Takes a Village

4min
pages 83-86

The Ring

4min
pages 79-82

Hemodiealysis

1min
pages 71-72

Five Hundred

3min
pages 73-74

Lana

3min
pages 75-78

El Toro

2min
pages 69-70

Phones and Watches

2min
pages 67-68

Sirius Black

1min
pages 65-66

Amasa » Mark

4min
pages 61-64

Sacramento » Nancy

5min
pages 57-60

Menlo Park (4) » Susan

1min
pages 51-52

Influence

1min
pages 53-54

Recovery

5min
pages 47-50

Roofs

5min
pages 43-46

Road Trips

2min
pages 55-56

The Prank

6min
pages 13-18

Transplant Lists

7min
pages 21-26

Vampires and Slaves

5min
pages 35-40

Menlo Park (3) » Susan

1min
pages 41-42

Menlo Park (2) » Susan

1min
pages 27-28

Hemodialysis

4min
pages 31-34

Menlo Park » Susan

1min
pages 19-20

The Recruit » Dr. A

1min
pages 29-30
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