During a week-long training session, Kai and his mother learned to run the dialysis machine overnight.
Transcript
It started about early 2005 when he did his dialysis, and so he was home and he did it at night for about 8 hours, but with that it meant all the supplies that he would have at the hospital were coming to us now. So about 6-8 weeks, there would be about 60-70 boxes of medical supplies and at the time we were living in a 2-storey house. The closets weren’t that big, so we could only fit as much as we could. So a box of solution, of dialysis solution, was about 5-10 lbs each, and he would use about 4-5 boxes of that. So 4-5 boxes were brought up from downstairs every single day and he wasn’t at the point where he was forgetting so I didn’t really need to help him out with different cords hook up to this and buttons and things like that. But both my mom and I were trained for a week, basic training on how to hook him up just in case it came to the point where we needed to help him. More or less, my job was just carting up all of the medical supplies and I would keep an eye on him for his medication just in case, making sure he didn’t double dose which sometimes he would do—not knowingly—and just keeping him motivated, and doing that very subtly because, just trying to imagine what life’s like in his shoes—he’s forced to medically retire, he has nothing really to do around the house when we’re not there— so just trying to like, “You can,” he still had the ability to drive, “you can go and do that,” and never really telling him “this” is what he needs to do, because I didn’t want to be judgemental, that I still have the opportunity to do things while you don’t.
More from: Kai
More content
- When care changes over time – Kai Kai’s father decided he would go off the dialysis. Kai describes the positive effects of this decision.
- Society and caregiving 2 – KaiKai was a youth caregiver. He would like the government to recognize that youth are often responsible for caring for someone too.
- Society and caregiving – KaiWhen Kai got a job, he didn’t tell his employer or colleagues that his father was ill. You don’t want to let everyone know that your family is not perfect.
- Resources – KaiKai became involved in a pilot project to raise awareness about youth caregiving and helped to create a youth support group.
- Providing support – KaiDuring a week-long training session, Kai and his mother learned to run the dialysis machine overnight.
- Personal growth and transformation – KaiAlthough caregiving is hard, Kai thinks we should embrace the experience and learn from it.
- Interaction with professionals 2 – KaiKai suggests that healthcare professionals get to know their patient and family, especially when visiting their home. Get to know their likes and dislikes, and how they like things to be done.
- Interaction with professionals – KaiIn one of the most difficult moments, Kai and his father met an excellent doctor who was honest and made Kai feel included.
- Impact on professional life and career 2 – KaiKai became involved in a video project to raise awareness for youth caregiving, and helped start a youth support group.
- Impact on professional life and career – KaiKai started working to help out financially, but was so distracted by the situation at home that he was eventually fired.