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Dialysis Center Design (Discussions)
Dialysis Center Design (Discussions)
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A center has a "water room" that holds the equipment for preparing the water for the dialysate.
These rooms can be quite large (20'x20') and really need a curb around them and floor drains if
something happens to leak. If the room is on the second floor of the building the floor will most
likely need structural reinforcing for the weight of the water tanks.
Most centers will have individual TV's at each chair, but not all centers have this amenity. Some
have internet, but I don't think that is a given either.
Most dialysis patients don't talk to each other and most want to be left alone for the treatment. I
can foresee a day where a nocturnal dialysis clinic might have individual bedrooms.
Most of the waste lines and RO (reverse osmosis) piping (water for dialysate) from individual
dialysis machines are carried in easy to access knee wall chases behind the chairs. They usually
cover the chases with laminated marine grade plywood topped with plastic McNichols grates for
visual access and ventilation. Most machines have a compatible wall unit that is recessed into the
chase wall.
There is usually a recessed slab area with a highly precise scale for weighing patients in between
the waiting room and the treatment room.
http://ihatedialysis.com/forum/index.php?topic=25253.0 1/4
5/3/2018 Dialysis center Design
Several patients coming to dialysis centers are being bused in from nursing homes and they require
a nice (hopefully covered) drop off area with wheelchair access and automatic doors at the front
entrance/waiting room.
I haven't seen a dialysis center do this, but a few hospitals I have worked in are installing luminous
sky ceilings from The Sky Factory.
Luxury vinyl wood plank flooring seems to be a popular choice in healthcare in clinics trying to feel
more like home.
You can probably find some actual plans for a dialysis center online. Most of us general
contractors put plans online now days for bidding purposes.
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My wife is JDHartzog. In 1994 she lost her kidneys to complications from congenital VUR.
1994 Hydronephrosis, Double Nephrectomy, PD
1994 1st Transplant
1996 PD
1997 2nd Transplant
1999 In Center Hemo
2004 3rd Transplant
2007 Home Hemo with NxStage
2008 Gave birth to our daughter (the first NxStage baby?)
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Tiered open seating levels facing a large glass curtain wall beside a natural area would be nice, but
very expensive and would require lots of ramps.
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http://ihatedialysis.com/forum/index.php?topic=25253.0 2/4
5/3/2018 Dialysis center Design
My wife is JDHartzog. In 1994 she lost her kidneys to complications from congenital VUR.
1994 Hydronephrosis, Double Nephrectomy, PD
1994 1st Transplant
1996 PD
1997 2nd Transplant
1999 In Center Hemo
2004 3rd Transplant
2007 Home Hemo with NxStage
2008 Gave birth to our daughter (the first NxStage baby?)
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They've built a new unit for us that is supposed to be open in the spring. It's in a new wing of the
hospital. I have yet to see the layout or anything. I don't even know which floor it will be on. If
it's on the top floor, which I doubt, we might be able to see a little bit of the harbour through the
trees, but it's from a different direction than from the nursing home, but most likely, all we'll be
able to see is the parking lot or the highway. I'm not really looking forward to that.
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5/3/2018 Dialysis center Design
Posts: 1117 1. Adequate parking spaces, well lighted all the way to them, maintained and snowplowed in
winter. I hate having to park far from the entrance, and then having to walk to my car on a dark
night and risk slipping on the ice or snow because the area wasn't plowed.
2. Adequate heat in winter. The dialysis chairs are all around the periphery of the floor near the
windows. And it gets damn cold during the winter.
(By now you can guess that I don't live in Florida or Hawaii.)
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