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Utah inmate's son sues after father misses dialysis, dies - Fox News PDF Print
ramone661.jpg

This image provided by the Utah Department of Corrections shows inmate Ramon C. Estrada. (AP)

The son of an inmate who died at the Utah state prison has sued corrections officials and health care providers, accusing them of violating his father's civil rights by failing to give him dialysis for two days.

Inmate Ramon C. Estrada died April 5 after two dialysis technicians switched shifts and nobody showed up for his appointment.

Estrada's son, Jose Estrada, who lives in Edcouch, Texas, filed the lawsuit in federal court this week. The lawsuit was filed against the state prison warden, the clinical services director at the prison and the director of the offsite dialysis clinic that's part of the University of Utah health care system

"Defendants exhibited a shocking degree of deliberate indifference and reckless disregard for the serious and evident medical needs of Ramon Estrada," the lawsuit alleges.

Utah Department of Corrections spokeswoman Brooke Adams said she can't comment because they have not officially received the lawsuit and because the department's internal investigation is ongoing.

University of Utah Health Care system spokeswoman Kathy Wilets also declined comment on the lawsuit, referring to statements made in April when the university said it deeply regretted the mistake and vowed to take the necessary steps to ensure a scheduling mix-up would not happen again.

The two technicians have been disciplined, but they remain employees, Wilets said. The health care system's investigation didn't find any bad intentions, just a terrible scheduling error, she said.

Clair Coleman, office manager at the South Valley Dialysis Center where the technicians work, declined comment on a lawsuit he hasn't seen yet. But he said they have taken steps to improve scheduling and ensure prison officials know how to get ahold of him or his workers.

He lamented the fact that prison workers waited two days to call his office after the appointments were missed in April. "All the changes in the world won't make a difference if the prison doesn't call when someone is late or doesn't show up," Coleman said.

The attorney for the Estrada family, Alyson McAllister, said the four adult children are suing because they can't get any information from the prison about what happened and because they want to ensure the same thing doesn't happen to other inmates.

"Those technicians definitely bear some responsibility for this, but more responsibility lies on the supervisors and the jail," McAllister said. "There needs to be some kind of oversight so a simple scheduling error like this doesn't' cause catastrophic damages."

Autopsy results have not yet been released, but corrections officials say it appeared Estrada died of a heart attack related to kidney failure. The lawsuit doesn't mention a heart attack, but it says he died of kidney failure.

Estrada had been in prison since August 2005 on a rape conviction. He was 62 and was set to be paroled less than three weeks later.

The Salt Lake Tribune first reported the lawsuit.

The lawsuit says the prison failed to provide Ramon Estrada with a level of care that a "civilized society would think necessary." It also accuses prison officials of failing to intervene in time to prevent his death.

Six other male inmates were also waiting for dialysis treatment because of the scheduling mix-up and were taken to a hospital for evaluation.

The situation reflects a lack of adequate training and oversight of dialysis providers at the prison, the lawsuit says.

The lawsuit doesn't list a monetary figure for the damages they are seeking, but it says Ramon C. Estrada's death deprived his family of "the companionship and society of their father."

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Regular dialysis: Edhi's hospital visit was a routine check-up, says family - The Express Tribune PDF Print
PHOTO: AFP

PHOTO: AFP

KARACHI: 

Friends and well-wishers of philanthropist Abdul Sattar Edhi can breathe a sigh of relief as his visit to the hospital on Saturday was just a routine check-up, said his family.

The news of Edhi’s illness and admission at the Sindh Institute of Urology and Transplantation (SIUT) spread on Sunday morning but members of his family said there was nothing to worry about.

Edhi was taken to SIUT but only for his routine dialysis treatment, said hospital sources. He arrived at the facility on Saturday and was admitted on doctor’s advice. “It was a routine check-up and he is absolutely fine,” confirmed Anwar Kazmi, the spokesperson of the Edhi Foundation. He also informed that Edhi has been admitted at the hospital many times in the past.

Published in The Express Tribune, June 22nd, 2015. 

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Additional dialysis centers put up in Davao to serve more patients - BusinessWorld Online Edition PDF Print
BusinessWorld Online Edition
As a result, the Nephrology Center of St. Alexius (NCSA) has chosen to establish eight dialysis centers in Mindanao -- an investment of P120 million total -- to serve patients whose needs remain unmet despite available facilities in the Southern

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Son gives dad new life as Father's Day gift - WQAD.com PDF Print

(CNN) — Nick Kaczorowski is putting your Father’s Day gift to shame. He is giving the gift of life in the form of a kidney donation to his father. His 55-year-old father, Lance, has end-stage renal disease, and in November, learned his kidney function had completely shut down.

That news left his father with three options if he wanted to survive: undergo dialysis treatments three times a week, wait for a cadaver kidney transplant, or find a suitable match from a living donor. The family had a major decision to make.

Dialysis would not require surgery, but what would it ultimately mean for his quality of life? Taking 12 extra hours out of his schedule, which already devotes 40 hours to his job in Tucson, Arizona, as a mechanical engineer, to rely on a dialysis machine to perform the work of his kidneys. On the other hand, opting for a kidney donation may mean a better quality of life for him, though the wait for a cadaver kidney could take up to five years. Those five years of waiting would also mean five years attached to that dialysis machine. The other alternative, a live kidney donor, seemed to be the best choice, but how would he find a compatible match?

Fortunately, Lance Kaczorowski didn’t have to make those decisions alone. His 27-year-old son and his two younger daughters had already decided to step up to the plate for their dad.

It’s not every day that children find themselves faced with the reality that their parent’s lives could one day depend on them. As Nick put it, how could he not at least try? “I couldn’t imagine going through life without him here, and doing this hopefully means I don’t have to worry about that anytime soon,” Nick said.

Nick, a software developer living in Salt Lake City, and his youngest sister Angela, a registered nurse, began researching the details of organ donation, knowing full well, and genuinely hoping, they could be the one to ultimately share one of their kidneys with their dad.

At first their father and their mother, Kathy, were reluctant to have one of their children undergo the surgery, but soon came to see the heart behind the motivation. “My initial reaction was ‘No, he’s my little baby boy. No, don’t cut him open,’ ” his mother told CNN affiliate KVOA. “But at the same time I didn’t want to lose my husband. He’s been my best friend for 28 years.”

As a biological son, he already has a 50% match of his father’s DNA. Sharing the same blood type gave them the green light they needed to pursue months of further testing, which later proved him to be a suitable match for the transplant. “Also I’m male, so I’ll never get pregnant,” he joked. “Donating a kidney can have some risk factors associated with getting pregnant and having kids later on, though nothing severe.”

As male kidneys tend to be physically larger, his gender and genetics definitely worked to his advantage for being “first in line.” His sisters were happily waiting next in line, though, should the testing not result in their brother’s favor as a match. They had even considered an organ exchange program should they prove to be a match despite having incompatible blood types.

In essence, they would offer their compatible kidneys to another patient whose loved ones were also incompatible matches, and in turn their compatible loved ones would donate a kidney to Lance.

‘We’ve always been close’

“My two little sisters are some of my best friends and my dad is the person I trust the most with advice. We’re still really tight-knit though we’re all dispersed,” he said.

After growing out of the inevitably uncomfortable teenage years Nick began to see his father differently through his own adult eyes. Increasingly, he realized that he wanted to have him around for a lot longer than his current kidneys could allow.

Already alike in so many ways, theirs is a bond that continues from followed footsteps to sharing identical kidneys. “Sometimes you have to accept a gift for the other person to receive the blessings from that giving. After years of giving to your kids, sometimes they get an opportunity to turn around and give back,” his father told KVOA.

The procedure

“As long as I can keep myself healthy — avoiding high blood pressure and diabetes — I shouldn’t have any complications with my remaining kidney,” he said.

His parents are still very concerned about their son’s recovery. “It’s not as easy as he makes it sound. I’ve read it’s actually harder on the kidney donor,” his father told KVOA.

His dad leaves pretty large shoes to fill when it comes to his kidneys — a 6’3? frame that needs as large a kidney as possible to essentially perform the function of two. Nick is offering up the larger of his two kidneys so his dad receives as much kidney function as possible. “Basically a kidney is just a filter, and so, the bigger the filter, the more efficient it can work,” Nick said.

As the donor, Nick’s operation will consist of the kidney’s removal from the main blood vessels. Lance will end up with three kidneys when it’s all said and done. He has less than 10% of kidney function with his current setup.

“The idea being that the blood gets filtered through what is remaining of his two existing kidneys for whatever filtering they might be able to do. Then it goes through the third one, which I donate to him, for the final filtering, that will actually get the job done,” Nick said.

The pair’s surgery is scheduled at the Mayo Clinic in Scottsdale, Arizona, for early morning, June 23, two days after Father’s Day.

As for the recovery, the donor will be on bed rest in Tucson for the subsequent two weeks while his father will remain at the hospital for a few days of observation and testing. The Kaczorowski family has also set up a GoFundMe page to help offset the costs of the procedure that are not covered by insurance.

Nick said he is unsure about what his dad will be getting for Christmas, but one thing is for sure: It’s going to be hard to top Father’s Day.

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Hospital celebrates opening of dialysis unit - Chaffee County Times PDF Print
The new dialysis unit

The new dialysis unit

The new dialysis unit at Heart of the Rockies Regional Medical Center boasts cutting-edge technology, three dialysis chairs and one isolation chair. The hospital partnered with Sanderling Healthcare to bring dialysis care to Chaffee County patients.

Posted: Saturday, June 20, 2015 6:00 am

“We just figured out that one patient in the area, who has been driving to Cañon City for 11 years, has actually spent one entire year of his life driving to dialysis,” said Heart of the Rockies Regional Medical Center nephrologist and hospitalist Dr. David Kanar.

The hospital celebrated the addition of a dialysis unit, a third operating room in the surgical services suite and the new locally based EagleMed air ambulance service by hosting an open house Saturday.

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