Dialysis: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)

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  • Опубликовано: 13 май 2017
  • For-profit dialysis companies often maximize their profits at the expense of their patients. John Oliver explores why a medical clinic is nothing like a Taco Bell.
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Комментарии • 8 тыс.

  • @jessicabowman2258
    @jessicabowman2258 7 лет назад +624

    "Richard Nixon"
    single person: "wooo"
    "Wow Really?"

    • @bus6292
      @bus6292 7 лет назад +46

      Before watching this video I'd have put "Richard Nixon fan who paid to spectate John Oliver's show" in at least the second or third spot on The List Of People Who Cannot Possibly Exist

    • @KoolKarl123
      @KoolKarl123 7 лет назад +20

      I rly respect Nixon cuz he started the EPA and now i have a new reason too, he did the dialysis thing

    • @jasonholtkamp6483
      @jasonholtkamp6483 7 лет назад +10

      Same will happen when people refer to Trump in 30 years lol

    • @haiderbehbahanipour3027
      @haiderbehbahanipour3027 7 лет назад +4

      @Sebas for a moment there I thought you said dictators like Pinocchio!!!

    • @pocketsoglesby550
      @pocketsoglesby550 7 лет назад

      Wow

  • @angeldude101
    @angeldude101 7 лет назад +1385

    "That's a good accent and I do not apologize for it."
    As a Canadian, the least accurate part of that accent was not apologizing.

    • @katecoman521
      @katecoman521 5 лет назад +11

      I was reading this as he was saying it 😂😂😂😂

    • @7isntitobvious7
      @7isntitobvious7 4 года назад +7

      thats the joke

    • @DS-tv2fi
      @DS-tv2fi 4 года назад +1

      As another Canadian, Sorry yoo got offended, eh?

    • @Lauren-rl4eu
      @Lauren-rl4eu 4 года назад +3

      Clearly you're not Canadian then because the apologizing stereotype is completely made up.
      It's so weird when Americans on the internet pretend to be Canadian lol. Like what's the point?

    • @DS-tv2fi
      @DS-tv2fi 4 года назад +4

      Lauren That’s the joke

  • @Crowley9
    @Crowley9 4 года назад +885

    "We are paying the most to get the least." That seems to be American healthcare in a nutshell.

    • @patriciatutaki3322
      @patriciatutaki3322 2 года назад +19

      it is ... the USA spends over $10k per citizen on healthcare, and that's the highest worldwide ... the next is Switzerland at $7.5k, but they get universal healthcare ... so where does all that USA money go? .... to companies and research organizations, yet so many companies around the globe outside of the USA, still invent many of the pharmaceutical remedies that we use today ... most other companies, if not all, fund their own research out of their profits, yet even though the American taxpayer funds private research, the company keeps the patents and all the profits! Go figure American's? ... is this what democracy and capitalism are? .... or is it rampant greed running out of control?

    • @Praisethesunson
      @Praisethesunson 2 года назад +4

      @@patriciatutaki3322 C suite cocaine doesn't pay for itself

    • @TheQuashingoftheTub
      @TheQuashingoftheTub 2 года назад +7

      @@patriciatutaki3322 It's definitely what _unregulated_ capitalism that we've lost all control of looks like. I hate it.
      I am not old enough to require my own health insurance, but when I hit that threshold, this job I have makes me so few dollars that I'd have maybe $170 bucks left after monthly payments, and that's not including other expenses.

    • @spongeintheshoe
      @spongeintheshoe 2 года назад +5

      @@patriciatutaki3322 Rampant greed running out of control. That's pretty much the root of everything wrong with U.S. politics.

    • @ChristineSK
      @ChristineSK 2 года назад +1

      the ironic thing is US actually has the most advanced medicine in the world. People go to US for treating diseases that local doctors can't deal with. it's just sad that all these advanced medical care can't be reached by most US citizens.

  • @emilyc.4000
    @emilyc.4000 4 года назад +865

    I had a heart transplant last year at 25. Make sure you sign up to be a donor after death. You don't need your organs and tissue anymore, but someone like me desperately does.

    • @davidk7544
      @davidk7544 3 года назад +50

      Absolutely! I do not understand why people need to take their healthy organs into the casket. makes NO sense. i salute the donor who helped you, and i wish you the best.

    • @MaidMirawyn
      @MaidMirawyn 3 года назад +24

      I’m so glad you found a match! ❤️ And YES, I am an organ donor.

    • @tairneanaich
      @tairneanaich 3 года назад +27

      I like to think that one day someone will use my heart when I’m dead and the damn thing gets recycled again- siblinghood of the travelling organ lol

    • @tigerlily1118
      @tigerlily1118 2 года назад +19

      My husband and I are both donors. When I was younger I didn't like the idea of my body being taken apart, but I got older, more educated and an episode of SVU helped me realize how stupid I was.

    • @gsp4prez
      @gsp4prez 2 года назад +13

      I’m a donor, and just signed up to be a bone marrow donor. If I can save a kids life who’s suffering from leukemia,sign me the hell up! I hope everything is going well for you, and long full life ahead!

  • @BlargleWargle
    @BlargleWargle 6 лет назад +913

    "Richard Nixon-"
    "WOO"
    "-Did a-REALLY?"
    This is easily my favourite moment of this entire show.

    • @DestroyerOfAglets
      @DestroyerOfAglets 4 года назад +30

      21:29

    • @saudade2100
      @saudade2100 3 года назад +9

      Nixon’s domestic policies were fairly liberal.

    • @BlargleWargle
      @BlargleWargle 3 года назад +68

      @@saudade2100 Yeah, instituting a war on progressives under the guise of fighting the nebulous and vague "drugs" was really liberal.

    • @mrttripz3236
      @mrttripz3236 3 года назад +7

      @@BlargleWargle yes actually. Obamacare as a concept is something that Nixon originally thought out but couldn't get it to pass through congress. What's more is that his was far more encompassing. So yes

    • @GodZefir
      @GodZefir 3 года назад +5

      I come back here just for that bit.

  • @scan606
    @scan606 6 лет назад +4040

    I'm an ICU nurse in France, and I can't believe what I just saw. No doctor on site and only one nurse ? If something goes wrong, and it can go wrong really, really fast, the patient is doomed. In France, there's no way we can put someone on dialysis without a doctor present and informed that the patient is about to undergo dialysis. I've never been happier with our french healthcare, and never been more sad and angry for americans. This is endangering patients for money. And yes, YOU SHOULD GET A TRANSPLANT !

    • @Bobelponge123
      @Bobelponge123 6 лет назад +74

      Hon Hon Hon baguette baguette baguette je surrender

    • @spock7945
      @spock7945 6 лет назад +135

      sadly, some cultures and societies encourage power, money, fame and idolise it too.
      America (over time) has become the epitome of such thing. (i'm not anti or pro capitalism or bad mouthing U.S. of A)
      Thankfully though some of their regulatory bodies and checks and balance mechanisms do work effeciently too.
      But yes, overall, the picture that comes across is of deep disparity.. be it the racial/ethnic minorities stuck in menial jobs or generally we see hard working Americans stuck in minimum pay jobs.
      the context of all this is relevant to this story/piece on the fraudsters because it shows how the system is built to ... in a way opress/take advantage of the lowest order at all times.
      and all this, in the information age!

    • @johndoe-wv3nu
      @johndoe-wv3nu 6 лет назад +122

      I have 10 years experience in hemodialysis. I left 15 years ago. I recently interviewed for a job I'm a clinic. I refused the job offer. I could not provide adequate care with the patient load. The pay was abysmal. They don't attract the best professionals and won't retain staff. American healthcare, gauged by WHO #37. Healthcare for profit here in the US is horrible.

    • @1WEareBUFO1
      @1WEareBUFO1 6 лет назад +95

      Real Laundry Sauce
      Dude, this is not the place....

    • @catmom1322
      @catmom1322 6 лет назад +53

      Registered Nurses in the US can dialyses patients with doctors' orders. The issue here is this company has hired much-lower-paid technicians to do RNs' work. It's when specially-educated nurses in a very specific field are qualified to do the procedure and the profiteers choose to hire basically high school graduates to do nursing that the trouble begins. It's the same in hospitals and doctors' offices. One interesting note: in many states (maybe all, I don't really know) it is illegal for a non-professional to call her/himself a registered nurse.

  • @mannyvillalobos5957
    @mannyvillalobos5957 3 года назад +888

    OMG I HAVE BEEN ON DIALYSIS FOR 28 YEARS AND I HAVE BEEN TALKING ABOUT EVERYTHING THAT WAS MENTIONED. Man thank you Mr. JOHN OLIVER for bringing some light to this crazy situation!!!! BAM!!!!

    • @busbear91
      @busbear91 3 года назад +24

      For 28 years! Wow, do you have hope of a transplant?

    • @mannyvillalobos5957
      @mannyvillalobos5957 3 года назад +17

      @@busbear91 I have been considering it lately due to the growing loss of the human aspect from the business of dialyizing people. Amazon sells a great shirt that says it all. It's under [funny dialysis cow apparel] I don't want a transplant but I am definitely thinking about getting one. Thank you for the question and I hope you checkout that shirt.

    • @busbear91
      @busbear91 3 года назад +3

      @@mannyvillalobos5957 yeah I definitely will. Thank you for the recommendation.

    • @Theluckypessimist
      @Theluckypessimist 3 года назад +3

      The turnover is crazy! But you patients maybe not you but you’ve prob seen how they are if they have to wait.

    • @pokerdegen1186
      @pokerdegen1186 3 года назад +5

      What’s the reason for not wanting a transplant?

  • @Stephaniededson
    @Stephaniededson 4 года назад +274

    I had a patient whose fistula became infected and burst. She bled out in less than 20 minutes. She died screaming for her Mother. That is why disinfection and cleaning is so important.

    • @belgiantheorizer2145
      @belgiantheorizer2145 3 года назад +39

      Jesus Christ...
      That's like a horror movie.

    • @wendyargyle2333
      @wendyargyle2333 2 года назад +49

      And they have the audacity to pay the techs $13 an hour, 16 hour days, and 6-8 patients per tech and wonder why these things happen or why no one is jumping to get that job

    • @Celticshade
      @Celticshade 2 года назад +12

      fistulas are sort of a terrifying thing. i still have mine in place for when i inevitably end back on dialysis in the future. but its like, theres the anurism where the fistula is, but like 3 more anurisms have formed but they are completely dead ends so they shouldnt be there. so if i nic any of them. i could bleed out fast. its a mixture of the fistula, and my arm just being super weird. the dude who ultra sounded my arm for an upcoming, surgery to do some more corrections is a vascular specific ultrasound technician and hes just like "you have a really, really weird arm. those anurisms are strange, your veins arent really where they typically are in someones arm, your veins just snake in the strangest way that doesnt make sense." i just looked at him and said, "yeah i figured so cause as i used the fistula i just noticed weird stuff about my arm" im still young so its like, me and one of the doctors were like. "makes more sense to keep it in place, instead of tying it off so we dont have to place a new one somewhere else"

    • @laurelparker3171
      @laurelparker3171 2 года назад +5

      @@belgiantheorizer2145 Every dialysis patient has witnessed blood pooling onto the floor. Because you don't have a fresh cut, the patient may not know. If the staff is distracted, the patient can pass out or worse before they are noticed. All it takes is one forgotten step or the patient's access failing. I've called for help because the patient across from me was bleeding.

    • @laurelparker3171
      @laurelparker3171 2 года назад +8

      @@Celticshade I refused to get one. My chest catheter worked fine and I was working towards a transplant - AND I am a sculptor and I USE that arm, damn it. I know people who completely lose use of their arm and everyone acts like it's no big deal.
      This ended up in quite a war at my center. My nephrologist was fine with it as is. So the dialysis center made me go to a venous center and be mapped. Their chosen venous doctor said I was just fine and to carry on - and BTW, everyone who ever looked at my wound said it was the cleanest prettiest wound they'd ever seen - and I have seen photos - disgusting! . So my center told my nephrologist she could no longer treat me. She conferred with me - said she really didn't want to fight them - they weren't following her protocol anyway, would I please use their doctor? I was being evaluated for a transplant so I said ok. Now, that fresenious doctor started fighting with my transplant doctors over it. One of them told her to go to hell (she told me this). and the whole time I was fed endless threats about how I was going to die from this cath, that worked perfectly. And I am sitting in dialysis 3 days a week watching people in fistula hell - in and out of surgery - bleeding everywhere - infections - and I am having no issues but getting yelled at and harassed? Something sure smelled rotten with that one

  • @user-pq2sq9xd1y
    @user-pq2sq9xd1y 7 лет назад +4613

    I love you Stephen Colbert!!

  • @jademoon4900
    @jademoon4900 7 лет назад +1911

    im 18 on dialysis and I really appreciate the awareness in such a funny way !

    • @anyghost
      @anyghost 7 лет назад +1

      Happy 18th baby. Daddy wants to give you a present.

    • @nevermore464
      @nevermore464 7 лет назад +36

      Jade-moon Caty Wish you all the best

    • @blackrose9ify
      @blackrose9ify 7 лет назад +37

      Hey.. My good wishes are with you :)

    • @RexGanymede
      @RexGanymede 7 лет назад +27

      I hope things get much, much better for you, my sister
      (much love!)

    • @jademoon4900
      @jademoon4900 7 лет назад +13

      THANK YOU :)

  • @katie4rd
    @katie4rd 4 года назад +137

    I gave my mom a kidney 8 years ago and she is better than ever. She was on dialysis for 11 years and was hospitalized many times for bleeding out in the middle of the night developing mental and other physical diseases due to the harsh effects of dialysis, I wouldn’t wish it on anyone. She was very sick after her treatment every time she often would loose the entire day. It was like she was only living 4 days of her week. I’m glad Mr. Oliver did an episode on this because it reaches everyone’s lives and is rarely talked about. I don’t feel like an extraordinary person for donating. I just know that given the opportunity and proper education about the procedure, anybody would do it.

    • @laurelparker3171
      @laurelparker3171 2 года назад +5

      I agree - my husband donated on my behalf ( his went to a stranger and mine came from one) it was his first surgery and he has major needle phobia. When asked why, he said "it's what you do for family". It gave him euphoria for several months, and a week after surgery he said he wished he had a second spare to donate to someone.

    • @matthewtaylorbrown
      @matthewtaylorbrown Год назад +1

      My mom was on the old battery of meds, too, she passed in 2003 with no veins left to use. Euremia is the way to go, if you have to go. I was half way gone myself before I sat in the chair.

    • @mammawlee
      @mammawlee Год назад +1

      I certainly would have been willing to donate a kidney to anyone that l LOVED. I knew that l had a very good immune system. But now that l have had cancer and cancer treatment, l am clearly out of the pool of donors.

  • @croat5786
    @croat5786 3 года назад +194

    John Oliver, please do an update for this episode. CA has a vote on a bill regarding dialysis and I have only seen negative ads to vote no on it.

    • @HaruSkage
      @HaruSkage 3 года назад +11

      Same, and they convinced me. I go back to this video, and I'm like I should've voted the other way. Of course DaVita is going to flood us with ads.

    • @candyman851
      @candyman851 3 года назад +21

      @@HaruSkage For future elections, I highly recommend referring to an objective online source such as ballotpedia before voting on Props. Really helps a lot when you don't know much about the Prop or it's support or opposition.
      You can read a summary of the Prop and what will happen if it passes, arguments for both sides of the Prop, and sponsors for the campaigns for and against the Prop. For example, Prop 23 (the dialysis one) was sponsored by both DaVita and Fresenius, as well as the Republican Party. From there, you make a decision from a more neutral standpoint rather than just based on what campaign is making the most noise with ads.

    • @davidk7544
      @davidk7544 3 года назад +2

      where ever you see a lot of "anti-" commercials, always vote for that.

    • @laurelparker3171
      @laurelparker3171 2 года назад

      @@candyman851 YES! This is a MUST - every election people vote for things they would never vote for if they read the bill carefully or went to ballotpedia. But no excuses if you are in California and they send that out to every registered voter well ahead of the election. My family all agrees, and we split up and each research part and share it. Except my daughter who started watching politics with her dad when she was three, majored in International relations and now works in law - because politics is so important to her. Then she just calls us up and says "is my ballot ready?" Sheesh.

    • @keenanspencer6156
      @keenanspencer6156 Год назад +3

      "Stop Yet Another Dangerous Dialysis Proposition is leading the campaign in opposition to Proposition 29. The committee reported nearly $86.4 million in contributions from DaVita Inc. and Fresenius Medical Care." - Ballotpedia

  • @TheEraihiryuu
    @TheEraihiryuu 7 лет назад +706

    I've been a dialysis patient for over four years now. I go to a Davita facility for my treatments. I have to say I guess I'm lucky and got a rather good facility, the staff and doctors there seem to actually care and never rush patients off the machines. I've been encouraged many times to get a transplant by staff though unfortunately I was refused by the only hospital n my area that did transplants due to financial and transportation reasons. Having renal diease is tough at 38 and it took most of my freedom away from me and its like no one cares, its hardly given any press on how many suffer with it and its ridicules. Thank you for the screentime on this subject.

    • @TheEraihiryuu
      @TheEraihiryuu 7 лет назад +13

      O.o No, just a patient. What makes you say that? Just because I like the facility and staff that I get poked and drained at? Look, I have no idea what happens at other places but the one that I go to is pretty darn good, they've taken care of me and helped me through some serious crap. *shrug* Classic case of "Your mileage may vary". If davita has trouble in other places I seriously hope they get it looked into or the government does.

    • @panepana211
      @panepana211 7 лет назад +1

      Erai Hiryuu I

    • @Ookopturcem
      @Ookopturcem 7 лет назад +3

      Yeah. There are two sides to every coin. John Oliver's show has sensational storytelling because it obviously gets more attention and more views. It benefits them to only show the bad stuff. Good luck with your illness.

    • @jennimeritt6195
      @jennimeritt6195 7 лет назад +3

      Erai Hiryuu My mom goes to Davita and it's 100 times better than the first place she went for over a year. That place always drew more and pass her dry weight. She was sick every single day until we moved her to Davita. She even has better nurses than the last place.

    • @laurelparker3171
      @laurelparker3171 2 года назад +7

      @@Ookopturcem Have you read all the comments? You seem to be the only one here who thought he exaggerated. Nearly everyone who has been a patient or staff member fully agrees. As do the lawsuits ( google them)

  • @jora9655
    @jora9655 7 лет назад +2042

    "Good intentions screwed by bad oversight and profiteering" - America in a nutshell.

    • @xOALtoFrEak900Ox
      @xOALtoFrEak900Ox 7 лет назад +28

      I really want to move to Canada, I don't see how Americans can take this.

    • @sarahthomas4587
      @sarahthomas4587 7 лет назад +23

      It's actually not that easy... that's probably what's stopping him tbh... all the expensive bureaucracy that is a necessary part of moving to Canada

    • @johnjeffrey3127
      @johnjeffrey3127 7 лет назад +13

      No it's NOT easy to move to Canada.. . torontolife.com/city/life/dear-americans-moving-canada-hard/
      Sorry..figure out health care for yourselves..we have enough strain on our "free" health care without a bunch of new patients from the US...

    • @NEETKitten
      @NEETKitten 7 лет назад +2

      It's easy to move to Canada. Just dress in middle-eastern clothing and claim you're a Muslim refugee. Trudumbass will give you instant citizenship before you can say "wait there's no screening process?"

    • @denizrad8267
      @denizrad8267 7 лет назад +50

      Yuki Nitta just like it's easy for you to be a stupid bigoted racist

  • @GregTurismo
    @GregTurismo Год назад +18

    I saw this video 6 years ago here on RUclips and thought he might have been talking to me. 2 weeks ago after years of trying, I finally was able to donate my kidney altruistically and I just wanted to say thank you for helping me walk in my calling and bringing this issue to my attention and millions of others.

  • @rebeccalarson5193
    @rebeccalarson5193 Год назад +36

    Yes! As a DaVita tech for all of 3 months, I can confirm everything in this video is true. It's heartbreaking. You care for patients who come in 3 days a week, hours at a time, for years. It's impossible to not build some really strong bonds. I have cried with a patient when she told me about family struggles and the next day another patient sang me the Happy Birthday Song. It's cheesy, but it really is a little family.
    Taking large volumes out of someone's body for an extended period of time is crazy dangerous and a patient "crashing" can happen within minutes.
    Which is why it really sucks when techs have to end treatment sessions early. We often worry about the patients more than they do. But we're given the choice of either running full treatments and only serving half the patients or giving every patient just a little bit and hoping that's enough to make it until their next treatment. We even calculated whose treatment we could end early so we could extend the treatment of a sicker patient.That is a decision no one other than a doctor should make, but we were forced to work with what we had and lived in constant fear of being responsible for the death of one of our friends.
    Finally, this is not the most concerning here, but I physically could not handle working there. I have never had to leave a job so quickly. The Corporate Office sets the temp for every location. More than a few days they decided to just not run air conditioning at all during one of the hottest summers on record. Technicians wear scrubs, plastic/paper gowns, gloves, masks, and face shields while frantically trying to do even the bare minimum. I guess I might be sensitive to heat, but there were multiple days where I had to leave early because I had literally sweat through everyone of those layers to the point of dripping, projectile vomiting, or fighting to not pass out.
    Healthcare, as a whole, known for cutting corners to maximize profits, but I have never seen a worse example than DaVita.

    • @matthewtaylorbrown
      @matthewtaylorbrown Год назад +4

      I loved my ladies.

    • @mammawlee
      @mammawlee Год назад +5

      Thank you for sharing your story. No-doubt it was difficult.

  • @Rodrigo-ei4ht
    @Rodrigo-ei4ht 5 лет назад +2286

    The phrases "for profit" and "medical facility" going together just sounds completely wrong

    • @MK-ex4pb
      @MK-ex4pb 5 лет назад +8

      What's wrong with profit? Should everyone just work for free?

    • @Odinsday
      @Odinsday 5 лет назад +138

      @@MK-ex4pb Do you honestly think jacking up prices on services and care that is meant to save the lives of people who are in dire need of assistance is a healthy thing for society? If you had any sense of a decent moral code, you would be against this corrupt, broken system we currently have and would be in favor of medicare for all (Tho, you probably think that would be the equivalent of Stalinism).

    • @MK-ex4pb
      @MK-ex4pb 5 лет назад +5

      @@Odinsday I'm against the hybrid bastardization we have, but commiecareless would be horrid. We need to deregulate and privatize more. Profit and competion are good things

    • @alexcampbell632
      @alexcampbell632 5 лет назад +127

      "Listen, I get that the problem here is that these under-regulated businesses are killing patients and wasting drugs to make more money, but what if we just regulated them less?"

    • @7Lace77
      @7Lace77 5 лет назад +48

      MK I’m English and the NHS works perfect, no issues whatsoever and people get the care they need.

  • @unlocked6352
    @unlocked6352 7 лет назад +218

    as a Canadian, I am honoured that you did our accent.

  • @JABoyle3875
    @JABoyle3875 7 месяцев назад +28

    I have a 13 week old daughter that has kidney issues. They are not serious right now but they are something that needs to be monitored. This episode is now 1 million times scarier than when I first watched it.

    • @josealfonsocontretas5724
      @josealfonsocontretas5724 5 месяцев назад

      Do some research on homemade fermented foods like say milk and water kefir, kombucha and many others, so that when your daughter is old enough to be able to consume probiotic rich foods you are able to provide them to her.
      Not medical, financial or nutritional advice.

    • @Randytherumbler
      @Randytherumbler 5 месяцев назад +1

      It's only temporary, though. And probiotic foods can only do so much for the human body.
      Until something *does* go wrong,and you don't have hardly any medical insurance and/or access to adequate medical services to your daughter getting them,what do you do,then?
      Move to France,of course.
      Or Costa Rica.
      And see if your budget,your health,AND hers,and your peace of mind,and see how far it goes.

    • @JSantyy
      @JSantyy 4 месяца назад

      Just to give you some peace of mind a lot of these federal guidelines have improved since this aired. I was an RN for Davita for two years and it was nothing like how bad this video made it seem…..

  • @MaidMirawyn
    @MaidMirawyn 3 года назад +18

    My grandfather was on dialysis. It extended his life enough that he and my husband (then fiancé) could get to know each other, and that my cousin grew up enough to form lasting memories of his grandfather. That is priceless, and twenty-five years later, I’m still grateful for that extra year. The last time I saw him, he told me, “He’s a good person; I won’t worry about you.”
    We miss you still, Papa. ❤️
    Edited to add: I checked with family. They’re pretty sure it was a nonprofit clinic.

  • @scorpion1442
    @scorpion1442 7 лет назад +187

    I was diagnosed with small kidneys at age of 12 my kidneys were size like a 5 years old. I was in dialysis for more than 5 years at young age. Basically I was getting worse every day. Finally I got a kidney from a disease person. Thanks to him and his family I'm still alive.

    • @filipevieira6042
      @filipevieira6042 7 лет назад +4

      scorpion1442 and the medics?

    • @MasterOfLazyness
      @MasterOfLazyness 7 лет назад +4

      Would have nothing to do without said Kidney. Praise the Kidney!

    • @iSniffStuff
      @iSniffStuff 7 лет назад +19

      Deceased- dead
      Disease- sickness

  • @fayleya3865
    @fayleya3865 6 лет назад +437

    Here in Australia I had a friend who couldn't have a kidney transplant. The govt loaned him a dialysis machine and he was allowed to keep it at home and do the procedure himself after training. He went on to live the longest of any dialysis patient ever. Says something about the relaxing and clean environment at home vs clinic.

    • @Bobelponge123
      @Bobelponge123 6 лет назад +18

      You have dialysis in Australia? Damn I thought everyone was running away from spiders

    • @Bobelponge123
      @Bobelponge123 6 лет назад +10

      And kangaroos and dust storms

    • @cim888
      @cim888 5 лет назад +27

      @@Bobelponge123 Dropbears mate, they're the real hidden killers.

    • @Bobelponge123
      @Bobelponge123 5 лет назад +7

      @@cim888 and falling off the earth

    • @databanks
      @databanks 5 лет назад +18

      @@Bobelponge123 Don't you know? According to flat earth nutters, all us Aussies are paid actors. WHERE'S MY FUCKING PAY CHEQUE?? Also, yeah, dropbears

  • @SandyRiverBlue
    @SandyRiverBlue 3 года назад +132

    Since this episode was released several DaVita locations went through name changes and more recently they were bought out by Optum resulting in a bunch more name changes. If you or a loved one needs dialysis a good resource is your local business license directory. A few good questions to ask are what are the parent companies of your local dialysis clinics, do they have a physician scheduled for every shift, and what is their nurse to patient ratio.

    • @laurelparker3171
      @laurelparker3171 2 года назад +13

      and take their class and pay close attention to how much they promote patient choice, including covering transplants in a very positive light. You should leave with the impression transplant is your best choice - by a healthy margin. Because that is the truth

    • @thegreypath1777
      @thegreypath1777 5 месяцев назад

      @SandyRiverBlue - Thank you for this information.

  • @JWRP2010
    @JWRP2010 3 года назад +59

    Donated my kidney to a stranger 12 years ago-- greatest experience of my life!

    • @smokeydoke100
      @smokeydoke100 3 года назад +1

      Thank you. ❤❤❤

    • @morganirvine2327
      @morganirvine2327 3 года назад +3

      Your an angel, I have everything signed off that if I die unexpectedly their welcome to take what they need because I won't need it anymore. (in Canada you get that paperwork to make that decision for yourself at 16) I know you can give a kidney and parts of liver and lung while alive but especially with kidney where you only ever will have two i don't think i could be at that stage while still alive unless its for someone i really care for. May i ask what brought you too that decision and how you have been over 12 years since?

    • @davidk7544
      @davidk7544 3 года назад

      Mother Theresa!

    • @ruthie_rosario
      @ruthie_rosario 2 года назад

      @@morganirvine2327 Same!

    • @marshallmcluhan33
      @marshallmcluhan33 2 года назад

      Well done!

  • @sarahb1718
    @sarahb1718 7 лет назад +146

    Last week my grandmas best friend died during Dialysis because they didn't have a physician on staff and he had a heart attack and no one could save him. They need physicians there in case of problems that may arise. Thank you for covering this.

    • @nancymcgee3342
      @nancymcgee3342 6 лет назад +4

      sorry about her loss...i am currently on dialysis 3 times aweek...4hrs and 15 minutes. i have seen people expire while there. everyone there has OTHER medical problems along with eskd. i have seen the staff do cpr and everything to try and save someone...as much as any dr could do. it is amazing. we are all going to expire. alot of elderly folks...alot need this treatment. alot will die patients already know this...its sad but true

    • @thatwitchychick2717
      @thatwitchychick2717 6 лет назад +4

      A doctor can't really do more than the rest of the staff in a clinic can. All we can do is CPR and call 911. The doctor wouldn't be able to do more. When I was a tech I saw men die with and without doctors in the clinics. Until they get to the hospital there isn't much more to do for them than cpr and using the AED of course, but that doesn't always work either.

    • @laurelparker3171
      @laurelparker3171 2 года назад +3

      @@nancymcgee3342 Not everyone there has other medical problems ( I didn't and I knew two others who didn't) it depends on why your kidneys fail. Common reasons that don't necessarily come with anything else are supplement use, drug use, medication side effects, polycystic, and covid. But anyone can still have a medical emergency there - big bleeds can happen to anyone - mine happened when a visiting nurse failed to properly clamp my tube. You don't feel that on dialysis until you realize you are sitting in a cold puddle.

  • @mjpo74
    @mjpo74 7 лет назад +722

    It takes skill to make a 24 minute talk about dialysis interesting - well done, once again, Mr. Oliver.

    • @duaynedraffen9319
      @duaynedraffen9319 5 лет назад +11

      Amazing, isn't it? I couldn't believe the subject matter when I saw it, but as a kidney dialysis patient, I'm very happy he did this.

    • @josephepps7805
      @josephepps7805 5 лет назад +2

      Can I pig-back on that comment n 2nd that!🤔

    • @verbose0
      @verbose0 5 лет назад +4

      Agreed. Delivery was impeccable. One of my favorite episodes.

    • @danthefan5378
      @danthefan5378 5 лет назад

      Mike Oconnor ~Very Well Said! ThankYou!

    • @objectivemillennial2117
      @objectivemillennial2117 5 лет назад

      Follow up question, does this feel good and let’s me know when your coming

  • @bridgetjones8339
    @bridgetjones8339 4 года назад +20

    I worked in a dialysis unit in a hospital. I never saw any shortcuts and our patients were treated well. However, patients stated to me that dialysis was not all it was cracked up to be when described by their physician and them agreeing to go on it. They wish they never had. They felt that they really had no quality-of-life.

  • @arminnowrouzi2101
    @arminnowrouzi2101 3 года назад +47

    Here in California, we will soon be voting on Prop 23, which increases regulations of dialysis clinics and addresses many of the problems John mentioned here. Thought I should come back for a recap.

    • @jeanniegrace4926
      @jeanniegrace4926 2 года назад +5

      Prop 23 was defeated, can't believe this was the outcome.

    • @thatguy9196
      @thatguy9196 2 года назад

      @@jeanniegrace4926 so now what?

    • @laurelparker3171
      @laurelparker3171 2 года назад +1

      @@thatguy9196 campaign everyone to read before voting. In California it's particularly shameful that people believed the propaganda ads, because you get the pamphlets with pros and cons to every issue and candidates debate their sides. Everyone in the country can also go to ballotpedia. Not bothering to become factually informed, but then bothering to vote instead of sitting it out or skipping what you don't know has lead to the majority of our national problems and nearly everyone is guilty to some extent.

    • @ashleywalters5949
      @ashleywalters5949 Год назад

      And now we have Prop 29... I fear it will not pass... again :(

    • @matthewtaylorbrown
      @matthewtaylorbrown Год назад

      Just in time for me to go back on after 13 years.

  • @ThisOldSkater
    @ThisOldSkater 7 лет назад +234

    Is there even ONE part of the health care system that isn't tragically broken?

    • @aliadeeb6859
      @aliadeeb6859 7 лет назад +12

      Number Six cosmetic surgery and Lasik. people pay without insurance so prices decrease and quality increases. Seems to be more competition and falling prices even with advertising and the latest treatments. That's about all I can think of

    • @phantomspaceman
      @phantomspaceman 7 лет назад +10

      Medical marijuana.

    • @ThisOldSkater
      @ThisOldSkater 7 лет назад +1

      Actually, didn't he do a whole segment on how messed up the laws are surrounding that?

    • @erinmchugh6425
      @erinmchugh6425 7 лет назад +4

      Number Six viagra is covered by insurance, if that counts

    • @Himax9
      @Himax9 7 лет назад +2

      The suckers that doctors give out are not made of glass.
      Wait... they stopped giving out suckers...

  • @kamryn631
    @kamryn631 6 лет назад +146

    John: "Richard Nixon did a tru-"
    Audience member: "Woo!"
    John: "Really!? Wow, history has changed!"
    So much respect if he came up with that on the spot.

    • @TylerBaraby
      @TylerBaraby 4 года назад +7

      @Frank Brown The irony of your ignorance is absolutely delicious. Thank you for that.

    • @ParkerGeographic
      @ParkerGeographic 4 года назад +18

      @Frank Brown You make plenty of good points here, but you do have to consider that Richard Nixon did start the war on drugs, a purposefully discriminatory way to detain members of the African American and Latino communities as well as activists that were known to use drugs. We must also not forget the chilean coup of 1973, where DEMOCRATICALLY ELECTED president of Chile, Salvador Allende, was killed in a military coup and replaced with Augusto Pinochet, a dictator known for throwing political dissidents out of helicopters. And even if you do believe in throwing activists out of helicopters, which is an inherintly shitty thing to believe in, still consider that they were done so without trial, that is an encroachment on human rights and freedom of speech, and not a very humane way to kill people. We also must consider he supported the Contras in the Nicaraguan turmoil, which, whether or not you agree with the opposition to them, committed atrocious human rights abuses. You can find the report here www.cia.gov/library/readingroom/docs/CIA-RDP90-00965R000605040041-5.pdf. And finally, there is of course the watergate scandal where Nixon had surveyed his political opponents by sending people to break into DNC headquarters and other such buildings to steal information. I rest my case.

    • @ParkerGeographic
      @ParkerGeographic 4 года назад +2

      @Frank Brown Let me amend my prior comment about the chilean coup: The CIA had clear connection to the coup and was likely orchestrated by the American Government

    • @laurelparker3171
      @laurelparker3171 2 года назад

      @Frank Brown He didn't write or vote on that law - Congress did. Then they passed it to him to sign and back then it would have reflected badly on him to refuse. Liberal Congress. Makes all the difference.

    • @TheQuashingoftheTub
      @TheQuashingoftheTub 2 года назад +2

      @Frank Brown He wasn't amazed that Nixon signed the bill, he was amazed that people did not hesitate to cheer for Nixon before he even finished the sentence. Hence the original comment, which was commenting on John Oliver's reaction to the _audience._

  • @MasterArchfiend
    @MasterArchfiend Год назад +7

    “How’d you get back here?” Is spoken with such legitimate fear that I have to praise it. That was amazing and is one of the reasons why I rewatch this one.

  • @ToniHunterOne
    @ToniHunterOne 2 года назад +8

    If you don't get out of my face, you will need a doctor!!! I love this lady! 🤭

  • @e8tballz
    @e8tballz 7 лет назад +414

    My mother was at a Davita clinic and died. And my father just started at Fresenius. This really broke me up. Glad I watched though.

    • @drewbadboi
      @drewbadboi 7 лет назад +5

      i work for t frenzy-nious... the clinic gets to be a zoo sometimes.

    • @aorg218
      @aorg218 7 лет назад +2

      Maria here is a story they wrote about My Father about the use of Granuflo in treatments. Just Google Son Contends Medication Killed Father. Very good story and the absolute truth.

    • @danaeantoine6950
      @danaeantoine6950 6 лет назад +4

      How did you deal with it? My mother is dying from this right now, and i'm just.....so scared and tired.

    • @clockworkkirlia7475
      @clockworkkirlia7475 6 лет назад +8

      I'm so sorry, all of you.

    • @matthiasnagorski8411
      @matthiasnagorski8411 6 лет назад +6

      God bless you all. My father was lucky enough to get a kidney and we thank fate every day. My aunt just went back on the list after a decade off it, I know she's scared. My sister has PKD, I don't know how she copes. It boggles my mind that this disease has followed my family for more than four generations. It passed me, but im going to try to keep myself in good health for the day my sister finally is told she needs to prepare for dialysis. Take care, everyone. Stay strong.

  • @becca8240
    @becca8240 7 лет назад +1223

    my god, the concept of healthcare as a business is sickening.. so glad I'm not from the US

    • @bresea702
      @bresea702 7 лет назад +22

      Becca Cowell lucky you😔

    • @charlesgreen632
      @charlesgreen632 7 лет назад +19

      Becca Cowell YES CAUSE THIS DAMNED SHIT OF COUNTRY IS ARROGANT AND FILLED WITH IDIOTS THAT NEED TO BE STRAIGHTENED OUT!! #Ijustbeinghonest

    • @SeppvonderWeide
      @SeppvonderWeide 7 лет назад +6

      Your profile pic looks cute! :)

    • @oliviah.8384
      @oliviah.8384 7 лет назад +30

      our country is shit

    • @nzsims
      @nzsims 7 лет назад +16

      Name one, and lets make the comparison.

  • @pandapounce
    @pandapounce 3 года назад +291

    I can't believe a brit on a comedy show helped me decide how to vote on a California prop (23, if you're curious).

    • @gillianespinoza3652
      @gillianespinoza3652 3 года назад +2

      How did you vote?? I can't decide. :(

    • @pandapounce
      @pandapounce 3 года назад +22

      @@gillianespinoza3652 I vote yes. I find it really telling that arguments against this prop never claim "our clinics are already safe".

    • @gillianespinoza3652
      @gillianespinoza3652 3 года назад +14

      @@pandapounce thank you! I also voted yes, I was unsure and then watching this video msde me realize how many people have been hurting because of this mess.

    • @mawuwus
      @mawuwus 3 года назад +17

      Can't believe California voted no, those ads really worked. So disappointed.

    • @piroozfereydouni2013
      @piroozfereydouni2013 3 года назад +10

      I was just coming to the comments to say the same, unfortunately their millions in ads convinced people to make the wrong decision

  • @elizabethreynolds3934
    @elizabethreynolds3934 3 года назад +23

    This money-hungry production idea runs rampant in dentistry too. Have worked in it for almost a decade. It’s not that they’re recommending treatment that’s a bad option, it’s that they want the schedule overpacked ($$) that leaves the clinicians less than minimal time for patient care and proper disinfection. And in “team meetings” we’re essentially blamed for not being quick enough.

  • @DPWFG
    @DPWFG 5 лет назад +1804

    Me, a Canadian: that is the wor-
    John: that is a GREAT accent and I DO NOT apologize for it
    Me:... Okay, sorry

    • @margaritam.9118
      @margaritam.9118 5 лет назад +50

      DPWFG
      It’s so easy to make you guys feel sorry 😂

    • @ramijihadarab6175
      @ramijihadarab6175 5 лет назад +33

      Why did I read your sorry in a Canadian accent 😂😂😂

    • @coena9377
      @coena9377 4 года назад +10

      @@ramijihadarab6175 Probably because they're Canadian.

    • @negativegains4883
      @negativegains4883 4 года назад +3

      its shit in canada too, but much better

    • @OysterWolf
      @OysterWolf 4 года назад

      I was going to say lol

  • @vanessathenavigator
    @vanessathenavigator 7 лет назад +139

    ONE NURSE???? My goodness. My clinic had a nurse for every five patients at most. Severe cramping, infiltrations (which are EXTREMELY painful and dangerous and happen often) , blood spillage,, etc, can NOT be handled effectively by one nurse. Thank goodness I was lucky enough to have a living donor, a fantastic doctor, and good dialysis center.
    Yes, you can get Medicare if you have kidney disease, but that does not mean it is financial easy street. You probably can't work and are on measly disability pay. You are likely paying hundreds a month for medication, and once you get a transplant, that medicare goes away, and then you have to take (expensive) medication every 12 hours for the life of the transplant. Thanks for this, John Oliver, if I ever go on dialysis again I know who to stay away from!

    • @DiggityDoglikeDogg
      @DiggityDoglikeDogg 7 лет назад +1

      A Davita facility is allowed to be open and treat a small number of patients with only one nurse in the building.

    • @AlexCio
      @AlexCio 7 лет назад +1

      this is such a bad fact. I also heard facts from german dialysis where they have doctors just to get a different status than a company. They play with peoples lifes and do not think one moment about how it would be to be treated like this.
      And we all know to less to talk about transplants.... Nobody tells you that it isn't all done after getting a transplant and that you might have to get back to dialysis at some time. At this moment people might thing it is all fixed after getting the transplant and I already heard a story of a woman who explained that it is no fun even you do not have to go to dialysis anymore.....
      Wish you good look on your way!

    • @philrivera1120
      @philrivera1120 7 лет назад

      One nurse for every eight patients

    • @laurelparker3171
      @laurelparker3171 2 года назад

      The laws have changed in the US. People with end stage kidney disease are covered by Medicare for life, regardless of age This used to stop 2 years after transplant but not any more. Also, immunosuppressants are covered 100% for life now. Not all doctors and pharmacies ( even specialty pharmacies) know this, so you may have to tell the pharmacist to run it through Part B Medicare . Make sure it is Part B and not D (drug insurance) I just went through this. Was surprised by how few were informed - someone on a transplant group told me.

    • @laurelparker3171
      @laurelparker3171 2 года назад

      @@DiggityDoglikeDogg I was in a large facility. One nurse - sometimes none

  • @PencilShavings
    @PencilShavings 3 года назад +16

    My mother was on dialysis for 23 years it was awful to watch her go through that.

  • @lalaser8160
    @lalaser8160 4 года назад +93

    I worked at as a dialysis nurse and loved my job. That's until DaVita bought our center. It is true. They only care about profits not patients.

  • @BoytardBill
    @BoytardBill 5 лет назад +489

    My grandfather, Dr William G Esmond, was instrumental in getting dialysis covered by the government. He was the subject of an article written in Time (in 1967) regarding his providing dialysis to patients out of his own pocket, using the equipment he designed and patented, starting in the early 50's.
    Have a great day!

    • @barbiegirlfashionabl
      @barbiegirlfashionabl 5 лет назад +22

      His heart must break knowing the state of affairs now.

    • @nelsongaskell4061
      @nelsongaskell4061 5 лет назад +2

      Bill Diaz okay ? Wired that your showing off because of what you dead family member did

    • @cremetangerine82
      @cremetangerine82 5 лет назад +5

      Sai Padma Priya
      I doubt his grandfather is still alive if he was a doctor “in the early 50’s”.

    • @victoriabaker4400
      @victoriabaker4400 5 лет назад +8

      @@cremetangerine82 Ok then, he's rolling in his grave.

    • @crowcopper4369
      @crowcopper4369 5 лет назад +23

      Hey Bill, just did a quick dig and you are right. The great doctors in the past were very passionate about saving lives. Remember they practiced when there were no insurance companies and they were focused on healing people even if those they were treating didn't always pay back. Once the insurance entities got in the middle of the doctor and their patients its became just another business. Their main purpose is profits nothing else.

  • @leslietaylor6221
    @leslietaylor6221 6 лет назад +426

    I worked for Davita for eight years. The first clinic I worked, everyone got promotions because of sleeping together. This was reported to DaVita; nothing was done. The dietitian didn't know patient's names, charted on deceased patients as if they were still alive, and had an....unusual relationship with the boss. She's now a boss herself.
    I am also a kidney patient. I have had ESRD since 1989 (10 years old), and am waiting for kidney #4. I lost my last transplant when Davita put me to part time via text and I lost their (crappy, but still) insurance coverage. This means my medicine was $4k out of pocket per month.
    They ruined me....and a whole lot of other patients and employees.

    • @Stacey_Robinson
      @Stacey_Robinson 5 лет назад +25

      That is so wrong. I'm sorry that happened to you. Are you at least free from them now or still working part time? You deserve an employer that doesn't abuse you. Shame on Davita.

    • @cseblivestreaming8073
      @cseblivestreaming8073 5 лет назад +6

      Very sorry for you

    • @agoblintrippingonhorrordus145
      @agoblintrippingonhorrordus145 5 лет назад +7

      That is simply atrocious. It hurts when you open your eyes and look at the world around you for what it really is

    • @lahlem6725
      @lahlem6725 5 лет назад +5

      That's unbelievable. Sickening.

    • @CircumcisionIsChildAbuse
      @CircumcisionIsChildAbuse 5 лет назад +6

      ....move to canada, we have health care...why continue to allow yourself to be fucked over by a capitalist health care system.

  • @Taffoman
    @Taffoman 4 года назад +61

    In that one piece John Oliver made about Medicare, there was a woman who had to choose between heart medication and insulin because of lack of money. She chose heart medication because she though it was more acute to her health. It's nice to know that when she loses her kidneys due untreated diabetes, she gets free dialysis... But somehow I feel like it still would be cheaper to pay for her insulin than her 4 times a week dialysis. Also she will lose her working condition after diabetes takes her eyesight and legs... I wonder who is gonna have to pay for her services after that.

    • @wolfeblister2503
      @wolfeblister2503 2 года назад +2

      She’ll probably just die. ‘Murica!!

    • @paulmonson4052
      @paulmonson4052 10 месяцев назад +1

      I don't know what her dialysis bill is, but I can say that the VA pays 6 figures for mine every month. And I only go 3 days a week.

  • @NoFairiesAllowed
    @NoFairiesAllowed 4 года назад +6

    My grandpa just got off a 7 year dialysis stint and everything about his entire quality of life improved literally in a couple weeks even while he was still recovering from the transplant.

  • @czarlguitarl
    @czarlguitarl 7 лет назад +278

    Great show. My own father donated his kidney to my cousin (his nephew), and actually they botched my dad's part of the surgery and he eventually died as a result.
    No doubt dialysis is dangerous, but no doubt, kidney donation is too. Thanks for the kind words about kidney donors, I agree, they are brave, great heroes who risk their lives.

    • @CharieVanWits
      @CharieVanWits 6 лет назад +23

      Carl Larson ah man that's so tragic. Things need to change

    • @czarlguitarl
      @czarlguitarl 6 лет назад +6

      Amen...thanks for the kind words. I'm sure they will have some crazy biotechnology out within a few years

    • @amberts180
      @amberts180 6 лет назад +5

      I'm so sorry that happened. I had never heard of such serious complications.

    • @ShakinJamacian
      @ShakinJamacian 6 лет назад +13

      Deeply sorry for your loss.
      Take solice in knowing your dad was in service to and for others.

    • @livhayes608
      @livhayes608 6 лет назад

      Sorry for your loss, I hope you're able to take comfort in the fact that he died doing something so noble

  • @Cadmus9501
    @Cadmus9501 7 лет назад +2712

    This is exactly what happens when you privatize healthcare, when the bottom line is the only thing that matters human life is thrown away.

    • @adrenaline19
      @adrenaline19 7 лет назад +56

      No, that's what happens when government is footing the bill. Same with student loans. If it was truly Capitalist, they'd have a ton of competition driving down their prices, like Walmart.

    • @maryhunter6389
      @maryhunter6389 7 лет назад +163

      @Mr.T Smith - No, you are wrong. There will never be a 'ton of competition'.
      The market has entry barriers and customers do not have a lot of freedom in choosing their suppliers.
      A perfect markt with perfect competition will never happen in health care treatment that is essential to survival.

    • @adrenaline19
      @adrenaline19 7 лет назад +19

      "there will never be a ton of competition"
      That's where you are wrong. Every market has entry barriers and if a free market were allowed, customers would have the most freedom possible to choose their suppliers. That's how real Capitalism works. (Not the crony b.s. American are currently being subjected to)
      The government should not be making deals behind closed doors with businesses. Lazy corporations don't need to save lives because they know they're the only game in town. Give Americans more options, more choices, more freedom. Not less!

    • @Shatamx
      @Shatamx 7 лет назад +18

      Thank you. Now smaller business are being hit with bullshit from Insurance companies. They can lose there current healthcare plan for employees if god forbid someone had to actually use for an emergency. Example my co worker son has cancer. Insurance opted out of our company this year and replaced it with a terrible option. Just to avoid the future cost and anything else that came up. Now a normal check up cost me 100$ when I walk in the door. God bless this country.

    • @Wandererplay
      @Wandererplay 7 лет назад +40

      That's why in Spain everytime some dumbfuck gets that horrible idea is shut down hard by the entire population. And we know they try.
      From the right-wing there has been many attacks in our universal healthcare delivered by the gov. They say it's too much expensive, there would be less waiting for patients, it would be cheaper, it would be easier to deliver if patients are chosen from those that need to be treated and those that do not. That op's are too much expensive, and need to be paid for. That private healthcare is better. Well private healthcare is not even able to deliver op's without using public services and even charging both the patients they are treating and the gov for doing so.
      But of course that would happen. You wouldn't be allowed healthcare!

  • @louybee
    @louybee 2 года назад +19

    Thanks Mr. Oliver, alas, I have recently been diagnosed with Kidney disease! Your video has been a real eye opener, besides being very entertaining & humorous,... it's also a potential life saver & a "mine" of "hidden" info! Dialysis patients, like myself, owe you quite a bit for this huge eye opener! Thanks again! PS Hope you warn everyone to cut back on their salt intake, a major factor in developing Kidney disease!

  • @jaymercha3859
    @jaymercha3859 2 года назад +2

    That Dr who said they're dead was magnificent.

  • @josevillalpando6730
    @josevillalpando6730 5 лет назад +2740

    I donated my kidney to my fiancée so she wouldn’t have to go through dialysis. 🤗

    • @magnanimus9692
      @magnanimus9692 5 лет назад +218

      Sure as shit beats some shiny rock.

    • @bryceadams4118
      @bryceadams4118 4 года назад +22

      I would do it as well but I'm kinda scared of the risks of surgery

    • @yerabbit6333
      @yerabbit6333 4 года назад +38

      you are a very good person!

    • @onetwothreefour3957
      @onetwothreefour3957 4 года назад +35

      wow, that‘s admirable! i definitely do want to do the same if mine ever needs one, but i dont know yet if i can even be a donor...but i‘d do it any day

    • @seiyuokamihimura5082
      @seiyuokamihimura5082 4 года назад +35

      Until she takes you for both your kidneys and the house. Lol jk. Love the good intentions, keep it up

  • @icut1
    @icut1 5 лет назад +453

    I worked at DaVita as a Reuse Tech and this is 100% accurate. I quit them because they only gave me 5 hours to do 8 hours of work. I had to take short cuts to meet an impossible deadline. I knew that the dialyzer`s I cleaned would not possibly provide adequate dialysis for the patient`s so I quit. I knew the people on the floor was not taking enough time to to allow patient`s to receive adequate dialysis on the machines also. I just could not take it any longer seeing bad patient outcomes. It haunts me to think I could have contributed to so many deaths by not given enough time to properly perform my job.

    • @shanteporter4676
      @shanteporter4676 5 лет назад +33

      At a dialysis tech i can relate.... I never worked at a DaVita, but all these for profit centers are the same.... They don't give you enough time to do the job properly.

    • @icut1
      @icut1 5 лет назад +23

      @@shanteporter4676 I also had to keep the acid and bi-carb tanks filled too plus unload supply trucks. I always had to drive to other centers to get supplies because our facility`s budget was so low they didn`t even have acid, bi-carb or Renalin to get through the month.

    • @mammawlee
      @mammawlee Год назад +1

      Very sad. And many other jobs will not let a person do their job correctly.

    • @mattlogue1300
      @mattlogue1300 8 месяцев назад +2

      I think of this episode each time I drive by, like a taco bell.

    • @ElizaJ42
      @ElizaJ42 7 месяцев назад +3

      Respondeat superior.
      The people not giving the workers time, faculties and supplies to do work properly are to blame.
      I know what it is to feel guilty in a medical setting but what can you do when your backed into a corner with no way out?
      Got fired for having ethics in a different setting.

  • @lanzend101
    @lanzend101 3 года назад +9

    I've been on dialysis since 2013. More people should see this video.

  • @danny_404
    @danny_404 3 года назад +9

    Can I get a compilation of John just saying “cool”

  • @corporalzeph2518
    @corporalzeph2518 7 лет назад +806

    #WhenIDiePleaseTakeMyKidneys

    • @ionlymadethistoleavecoment1723
      @ionlymadethistoleavecoment1723 6 лет назад +7

      EnderCat #tell that to the DMV

    • @aperson4075
      @aperson4075 6 лет назад

      EnderCat Wont work, they'll be msotly dead cells

    • @gracek3846
      @gracek3846 6 лет назад +1

      Oliverleo2007 Not if they harvest them in time.

    • @spock7945
      @spock7945 6 лет назад

      and cornea and heart and even skin can be grafted and and and

  • @TheLovelyRarity
    @TheLovelyRarity 6 лет назад +316

    I got my degree in business management, and I can safely say a first year business student would know that YOU CANT RUN A MEDICAL FACILITY LIKE A BLOODY TACO BELL!!!!! Medicine should be a practice, not a business. Purposely profiting off illness and injury is disgusting.

    • @sunfeatherX3
      @sunfeatherX3 5 лет назад +1

      Well those people have to make money somehow.

    • @thandie67
      @thandie67 5 лет назад +1

      True but to be honest Americans love it. How do I know, I lived in Las Vegas and a doctor from India run his colonoscopy like a fast food place and most of his patients contracted hepatitis C and or HIV, non of his patients ever complained even when they walked into a shitty (literally) clinic.

    • @hvanmegen
      @hvanmegen 5 лет назад +4

      yeah, but do you know how filthy rich you can become while doing it? it's that what businesses are after in the end (especially when they've gone public). The problem is in the 'for profit' part.. not the company part.. Healthcare should be a function of the government, like the military... it should not be left in the hands of the easily corruptable

    • @seededsoul
      @seededsoul 5 лет назад +2

      I don't think a first year business student knows ANYTHING.

    • @starladaly3091
      @starladaly3091 5 лет назад

      @Frank Heuvelman
      He's talking about for-profit dialysis centers. It's privately owned, not government run.

  • @canman1966
    @canman1966 3 года назад +29

    Here's a little known fact for you. I had a heart transplant a few years ago, and before receiving the heart I got, there was another heart that came up as a match for me that was in the US. (I am Canadian) Long story short, I didn't get that heart only because we couldn't get a team to it in time to harvest it, and get it back to transplant into me in time. That was when I found out that there is a difference between our countries. Canada will accept organs for transplant into Canadians, but The US will not accept out of country organs to transplant into Americans. Most people may not care about that, but the families of people that die waiting for organs sure will I am betting.

    • @hollydowns2279
      @hollydowns2279 2 года назад +6

      Racism in America is really sad

    • @laurelparker3171
      @laurelparker3171 2 года назад +3

      @@hollydowns2279 Absolutely but that has nothing whatsoever to do with organ transplant. Kidney transplant in particular is remarkably equal opportunity ( because Medicare covers everyone equally)

    • @laurelparker3171
      @laurelparker3171 2 года назад

      To everyone reading that comment - The US has very strict criteria for transplants for reasons casual readers and even most recipients do not have enough knowledge to understand. It's a cheap shot to trash a system that was built on complex ethics to an audience who may just be learning about kidney disease. Read his comment again - a team could not get to the heart in time to harvest it - period,, end of story. does it sound like the US won't accept out of country organs to you? He chooses to make a time issue political, but I'm pretty sure Canada won't use day old organs either. And then some other crackpot makes it racist.
      He is correct that the US does not accept organs they can't confirm the origin of. That is to keep you from waking up in the bathtub with your kidneys missing and to keep desperate recipients from trying to buy organs and smuggle them through Canada or somewhere. But that had no bearing on his not receiving that heart.
      I have a transplant and I also had my first offer fall through at the last minute ( the matches are initially done virtually and are almost always accurate - this one wasn't and failed the last minute actual match test). I am 100% supportive of the ethics policies regarding transplants in the US. Most of them involve whether or not the recipient can - and is willing to - keep the organ alive. The donors have a right to be respected too. And deceased donors receive the same respect as living ones, because they have families, who often view that heart or kidney or eyes as the only thing they have left of their loved one. Plus there is a shortage ( an extreme shortage, in the case of kidneys), so there are ethics decisions based on those considerations.
      .

  • @joijackson-irwin4131
    @joijackson-irwin4131 3 года назад +2

    My father has been on home dialysis for over 25 years and is in good shape and I'm glad he is still with us🙏🙏🥰🥰😄😄

  • @yann-fanchcourtay8641
    @yann-fanchcourtay8641 7 лет назад +29

    I'm watching this during my 5 hour long dialysis, in France. And I'm translating everything to the staff and the patients.
    We are horrified. We know that our situation regarding healthcare is generally better, but we never expected that kind of fuckery.
    Trully disgusted. Big shout out for the american dialysis patient from French patients, keep courage and get that transplant as soon as you can!
    And thanks to John Oliver and his team for speaking about this. You are always awesome, but this time, it felt special!

  • @MrEab2010
    @MrEab2010 7 лет назад +15

    I am a dialysis patient so this hits home. My life depends on a fucking machine I'm hooked up to 4 hours a day, 3 days a week. Lovely.

  • @AudoricArt
    @AudoricArt 3 года назад +146

    Who's here because you've been getting those ads against the recent CA prop meant to ACTUALLY regulate these guys?

    • @lancelance4582
      @lancelance4582 3 года назад +7

      Going over the ballot with my wife. Davita is funding the opposition.

    • @ShibaDoggie939
      @ShibaDoggie939 3 года назад +12

      Yup!! I immediately thought of this video when I saw the ads. Thank you John Oliver for educating me so I don't trust the ads

    • @zereprd3911
      @zereprd3911 3 года назад +3

      OMG! California Proposition 23 for the November 2020 ballot.

    • @HelloHi-ik5lx
      @HelloHi-ik5lx 3 года назад

      Wait I’m so confused

    • @HelloHi-ik5lx
      @HelloHi-ik5lx 3 года назад

      But what John says makes me think the unions would be in favor of regulations so what you’re saying doesn’t make sense to me. How do you think of both together?

  • @Nathan_Heaps-Page
    @Nathan_Heaps-Page 4 года назад +23

    This is exactly what is likely to happen when you begin running healthcare like a business rather than a public service.

  • @TooLittleInfo
    @TooLittleInfo 7 лет назад +26

    i just paused this video and went online to register right then as an organ donor. Thanks John Oliver for reminding me. I've been meaning to do that for a long time. hopefully when i die my shit's still in good working order so docs can rip apart my body and redistribute me. :D

  • @3kornx
    @3kornx 6 лет назад +827

    My mom is under dyalisis in France. She is at home, with its own machine that works during nights and everything is paid by the government. Nothing is private so no profits are maid and it does not cost a lot of money. Indeed our country is not perfect but for health our system is quite great

    • @holicaowow1847
      @holicaowow1847 5 лет назад +45

      Nocturnal Dialysis is an amazing upgrade from regular dialysis. I did it for 10 years and finally got my second transplant. Once you get used to the noise of the machine (which can be quite loud) it was by far the best form of dialysis I had to endure. Even saying that, if you can, GET A TRANSPLANT!!!

    • @crockerzz8896
      @crockerzz8896 5 лет назад +19

      I love that since the government covers the procedure the medical field has priced the dialysis at the lowest possible price point. Where as in America they will price it at a mid-level and add a good percentage of profit, and when you look at the bill it's just on price, usually several thousand.

    • @crowcopper4369
      @crowcopper4369 5 лет назад +39

      KoRnx, your mother is very fortunate to be in a country where ones illness or sickness is not up for sale to the highest bidder. Here in States everything is for sale. Hell! They will sell you air if they could find a way to do it. I just don't understand how a country can be considered great when its citizens health can be legally profited from. That's immoral in my view.

    • @Odinsday
      @Odinsday 5 лет назад +5

      @@jimhabsfan Honestly, France sounds fucking amazing. I kind of want to move there.

    • @albertnielsen1154
      @albertnielsen1154 5 лет назад +19

      DustyO'Rusty, It's not just France. Its the same in Germany and the three Scandinavian countries. Taxes are high, but when you need it most, medical treatment of any kind (need a new hearth? $0.00; last stage cancer? the state (meaning all citizens) pays a heap to keep you alive an extra 6 months), free school, free high school, college not only free tuition but in eg. Denmark you get paid close to $ 2,000 a month to study as an investment in the common future. In the US taxes + health care insurance are (actually not very much) lower, but when in need of important health care, you PAY.

  • @georgekent529
    @georgekent529 3 года назад +27

    i just voted Yes on prop 23 California but some how it did not feel like the end of the madness. hope it PASSES ....

    • @Super0497
      @Super0497 3 года назад +3

      Just saw this comment. Insane that it didn't pass. And it was over 4 million votes that would deny the proposition. Do that many people really care about corporations like that? It must have been a lack of knowledge or the ads saying to vote no. Just goes to show that you should always do your own research. I actually didn't even vote on a few propositions because I didn't feel comfortable with deciding on something that I didn't have enough information on.

    • @georgekent529
      @georgekent529 3 года назад

      i live 1 hour from mex tj if i ever need it William Hitt center

  • @glassXmoon
    @glassXmoon 3 года назад +4

    This show is so important to inform people these topics in an informative way.... I hope shows like this never permanently die out

  • @MohammedMuaawia
    @MohammedMuaawia 7 лет назад +352

    DeWalt ladders market share increases 500%

    • @akrybion
      @akrybion 7 лет назад +2

      Mohammed Hamza Time to get stock I think

    • @stevepittman3770
      @stevepittman3770 7 лет назад +33

      Naw, everybody who cares about ladders already knew they make good ladders.

    • @themightysven
      @themightysven 7 лет назад +22

      Well their market share is already really high because they do make really good ladders

    • @DouglasWalrath
      @DouglasWalrath 7 лет назад +10

      sure, just make sure mexico pays for that ladder

    • @nemernemer
      @nemernemer 7 лет назад +1

      Mohammed Hamza You're clearly not american.

  • @sulsulii810
    @sulsulii810 7 лет назад +133

    I can't believe that man may be the reason I had to attend my grandfather's funeral two weeks ago

    • @loserberry684
      @loserberry684 7 лет назад +49

      Casey Heidt I'm so sorry for your loss. A failed healthcare system should not be the reason for the death of a loved one or anyone else for that matter

    • @geminiglam3718
      @geminiglam3718 7 лет назад +4

      So sorry to hear that. I am lucky, we live in Canada and don't have to deal with this the same way. My Dad has been on dialysis for 3 years now, and refuses a transplant.
      Big hug and I am so sorry for your loss.

    • @holicaowow1847
      @holicaowow1847 5 лет назад +1

      I can actually understand refusing a transplant. Any surgery is tough on the body, especially if you're older. I've had two, I don't think I could go through a third if I needed to

    • @laurelparker3171
      @laurelparker3171 2 года назад

      @@geminiglam3718 Why is he refusing a transplant? Some reasons are valid but others are suspicious - who is influencing his choice? In the US the entire dialysis staff may drop discouraging little comments that feed doubts. My transplant surgeon told me plenty of nephrologists don't believe in them - because years ago (when they were in med school ) they were risky business with rough immunosuppressants and it was expensive - it's all changed.

    • @laurelparker3171
      @laurelparker3171 2 года назад

      @@holicaowow1847 Mine was a cake walk. We never know until we try it and if it's not great - go back to dialysis.

  • @foxxxy1115
    @foxxxy1115 4 года назад +4

    John, you and your writers are fantastic human beings for exposing people like this. I did just want to add for the public's knowledge, however, that there are some cases where dialysis is the better option. People seem to think that transplants just solve all the problems. Working extensively in a transplant clinic has taught me that that's not always the case. Transplant operations are huge, take an enormous toll on the body, and you need to be on meds and be followed for the rest of your life. If you're young and relatively healthy other than with kidney problems, then definitely. But for people who are much older, weaker, have several health problems, a transplant can actually be a terrible idea and dangerous for the patient. Not even trying to play devil's advocate here, I just want to dispel the rumor that a transplant is for everyone and a relatively easy fix. It goes much deeper than that. That being said, we need a whole revamp on the dialysis system! Thanks for continuing to educate us!

    • @mr.casillas1556
      @mr.casillas1556 4 года назад

      Rebecca Antonucci Sooo true I’m young and that transplant was tough on my body I still haven’t fully recovered. When I was in the transplant part of the hospital I saw an older couple the wife had just been informed about something with her husband and I overheard crying. I’m not gonna assume anything but it can definitely be tough even fatal.

    • @foxxxy1115
      @foxxxy1115 4 года назад

      @@mr.casillas1556 yeah it's a tough process. If you're young that's going to definitely help you, but a lot of people just assume a transplant fixes everything and don't consider what actually takes place. I'm glad you got one though and I sincerely hope that you continue to do well! As long as you don't have a love affair with grapefruits, your life will eventually get back to normal! 💯♥️

  • @kineteks77
    @kineteks77 3 года назад +15

    Watching this to get more background for prop 23 in California

  • @joshgrelle7028
    @joshgrelle7028 7 лет назад +33

    My mother worked for Fresenius for over a decade as an RN. The hours were long and the pay was terrible. The conditions were worse. That said, Davita made them look like a pleasure resort. Davita would often send potential employees to Fresenius for training and then steal them by offering them higher wages. She finally got out of the company, thank god. Sucks that they're both the only games in town.

    • @CRTRRTinGA
      @CRTRRTinGA 7 лет назад +8

      Agreed. My mom spent a short stint as a dialysis tech. The clinic promised her training, then sent her home with educational materials. She was expected to read and learn off the clock. She watched as they dumped waste products down the drain instead of disposing of them properly. As a health care worker in a hospital, I've seen too many patients who ended up in our ER because they didn't get to complete their dialysis session. Brutal.

    • @Oreofive77
      @Oreofive77 7 лет назад +3

      Josh Grelle both companies do that.

    • @laurelparker3171
      @laurelparker3171 2 года назад

      @@Oreofive77 I live in two states and used fresenius at one and davita at the other. Aside from the difference in staff there is no discernible difference. At MY davita center the staff were great and at MY Fresenius most weren't very caring, but that is the luck of the draw. Also I never had problems with nausea or other discomforts while I was at the davita one, which makes a difference in what we happen to see and experience.

  • @JakeobE
    @JakeobE 7 лет назад +703

    Who knew Richard Nixon was such a progressive? From starting the EPA, to a medicare for all system for people suffering from renal problems, to opening relations back with China. The more you look into it, the more you realize that Nixon is nothing close to as horrendous as Trump, no matter the scandal. *Nixon looked like an angel compared to our current man-child in chief.*

    • @jaspirita
      @jaspirita 7 лет назад +45

      I wonder if that means future generations, when comparing presidents, will look at Nixon as this, kind of, great guy? Holy crap, that's difficult to think about. So funny and sad at the same time O_O

    • @Cin9999
      @Cin9999 7 лет назад +4

      Jake Evan
      well why sad?
      in the end its only about what you do not what you say
      and he has also done bad things that nobody will forget

    • @Alex-ki1yr
      @Alex-ki1yr 7 лет назад +1

      +

    • @whychoooseausername4763
      @whychoooseausername4763 7 лет назад +33

      Jake Evan Nixon wasn't a great guy, conservatives just used to harbour better debate.
      He founded the EPA because people were worried about air and water quality, and pressured conservatives, it wasn't because he was a tree hugging liberal.

    • @FeyTheBin
      @FeyTheBin 7 лет назад +2

      What can I say, he's not a crook.

  • @charlescummings1128
    @charlescummings1128 2 года назад +7

    It is a sad commentary on the US healthcare system. I first noticed blood in my urine and my Healthcare provider never indicated that I had a problem. I applied for life insurance which required a physical with blood test. I was denied a policy but the company refused to tell me the reason I was turned down. After hearing that my health company was being sued by a child movie star for ignoring her kidney disease. She was insured by my same HMO. I went to a hospital to get a second opinion and was told my kidneys were at their end stage. I have been on dialysis for 7 years now. I am fortunate to have a good company and an excellent technician. I am hoping to survive until an artificial kidney is developed.

  • @joey5893
    @joey5893 3 года назад +18

    I’m a nurse on a hospital floor that sees a lot of dialysis patients, and every time I find out they go to DaVida, I ask them about their experience in the clinics because this episode haunts me.

  • @OverApathy
    @OverApathy 7 лет назад +200

    21:32 The entire part where the dude cheers at Nixon is hilarious

    • @andremoreno1112
      @andremoreno1112 7 лет назад +7

      Deleted Emails Nixon wasn't THAT bad he did good things I think gets a bad rap, although I understand why people hate him but still .

    • @jessetorres8738
      @jessetorres8738 7 лет назад +10

      You should know that Richard Nixon committed an actual act of treason involving the Vietnam War. While Nixon was running for President in 1968, President Lyndon Johnson wanted to begin new peace talks between the North and South to try to end the war within the next year or 2 (and some believe that this could have worked if Hubert Humphry had won in 1968). However, Nixon secretly contacted the leaders of Vietnam and basically told them to not make any deal with Johnson and wait until after the election, because if Nixon won he promised to provide both with a better deal which (unknown to the public at the time) was his "secret plan" as he called it. Now, according to the U.S. Constitution, Treason (which is the ONLY crime fully defined within the document) is providing aid or comfort to an enemy that we are fighting during a time of a DECLARED war. This is why no 1 in America has been arrested for treason (but rather charged with defying the Logan Act) since WW2, and why no President (despite all the claims by angry citizens that they could be removed on the grounds for treason) has ever faced impeachment for treason, not even Nixon as President. And even when President Johnson called Nixon to confront him on this, Nixon was obviously lying when he said that he wasn't preventing the peace talks from happening, and Johnson knew he was lying but couldn't do anything about it. So yea, Richard Nixon committed an actual act of treason but much like John Kennedy hiding his Addison's Disease during the 1960 election (or even President Trump if any impeachable evidence about his relationship with Russia is found), the public didn't know about this potentially damaging piece of evidence that could hurt the President and America when they had voted for him.

    • @cinne2135
      @cinne2135 7 лет назад +7

      andre moreno He was horrible. People liked him because he was charismatic and seemed to be "real," not afraid to tell it straight, etc., and there was still a large disconnect of the goings-on in DC vs the rest of the country.
      But Nixon was a compulsive liar, a drunk, woefully insecure to the point of madness, an abuser of power....a tricky, shitty dick to say the least. Were it not for his antics and dishonesty in pining for the White House, Vietnam could've ended several years sooner. The lives lost! FN bastard is what I call him...

    • @animelover3083
      @animelover3083 7 лет назад

      CinnE why did he give everyone free health for their kidneys though?

    • @cinne2135
      @cinne2135 7 лет назад

      animelover3083, there's a lot I know but a whole lot I don't about the *specifics* of his presidency. But I do trust JO is telling the truth. I imagine any "compassion" coming from Nixon had more to go with perceived good combined with excellent staffers and their research and a positive, "good guy" story like with the EPA than doing the right, moral thing. also, then, the ramifications of the nation's health and its cost wasn't on the radar like now.....look at the ridiculous promises the gov't gave to coal miners working for *private* companies....smh

  • @adsweaty
    @adsweaty 6 лет назад +100

    I'm a tech working at Davita, came from ARA. I was flabbergasted that there was only one nurse and two techs on a given day for 10 patients. That is ridiculous. I had double the number in ARA and the patients seemed much happier. I'm trying to be a good tech for my patients and help them have a pleasant time during they're treatments but I can only do so much. I hope everyone that is on dialysis gets either a kidney or and artificial kidney that's undergoing clinical trials this year. I ALWAYS try to tell my patients about better options. Even if it leaves me out of a job

    • @tonytsai844
      @tonytsai844 4 года назад +1

      Is turnover high at Davita? I am starting my tech training soon, and my friend keeps updating me about the weekly 1-2 new positions that are posted locally.

    • @jimmyboyles2868
      @jimmyboyles2868 4 года назад +2

      @@tonytsai844 VERY high. Been on dialysis over six years and seen so many go. Three just last week. It sucks because you get to know them and that eases the pain of dialysis.

    • @korpakukac
      @korpakukac 4 года назад

      They're treatments

  • @riverseverywhere
    @riverseverywhere 2 года назад +2

    7:52 - when you've been watching John Oliver long enough to know what's coming next

  • @FizzleFX
    @FizzleFX 3 года назад +3

    DANG ... 0:40 that grandma, i wouldn't mind sending her a card on christmas XD

  • @mattbob5244
    @mattbob5244 7 лет назад +406

    I've been reading some of the comments and let me just tell you my perspective on this. For all the people who are saying bad health, obesity and other health problems contribute to this are right. I was born with chronic kidney disease, i just turned 21 and now in the pre dialysis stage. i dont smoke or drink and have a very healthy lifestyle. just wish people could understand that some cases are people drinking or smoking themselves into this. after watching this video im very scared to go into one of these clinics. i could potentially die before 30 because faulty company polices. no looking for pity just wanted to share my story on this.

    • @chelleyflowers4245
      @chelleyflowers4245 7 лет назад +9

      Matt Bob Babe, you'll be okay...you are the manager of your care. Learn everything about the machine and set up and your dialysis prescription. Make sure you have a great vascular surgeon and remember you know your body better than anyone. If you're able to be transplanted go for it...like hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis it is a treatment option. I've done hemo, peritoneal and I have had a transplant...back on hemo. Email me if you have questions flowersmichelle20@gmail.com
      March 1 began my 18th year of ESRD

    • @denisehall4818
      @denisehall4818 7 лет назад +9

      Contact one or two of the local transplant facilities and see if you can get on a list before your kidneys fail.If you can't,get started IMMEDIATELY after you go on dialysis. You can go on more than one list. Do exactly what the transplant facility tells you to do.Go to all the transplant facility appointments.Get your teeth fixed and make sure you have no possible infections in your body.Make sure you have transportation and a working phone.Act interested,remember if you don't have your own donor, you are essentially in competition for a kidney.Kidneys are limited,they will not give you one if you show them that you will not take care of it. Since you are young and take care of yourself you have a good chance of getting a kidney within approximately 3 years.ONE SPOILER,each donated kidney has to match up with your body to some extent so some donated kidneys will not work with your particular body so you will be passed over for those.

    • @cagloamask
      @cagloamask 7 лет назад +1

      I watched a fascinating TED talk about dialysis and the featured speaker said she performs her own dialysis at home. She said that it was possible for other patients to do it as well but she didn't go into specifics about cost.

    • @denisehall4818
      @denisehall4818 7 лет назад +4

      Cost for patients is almost exclusively paid by medicare,medicaid and private insurance.Personally I have never seen Davita turn anyone away.They can write off non payers.About peritoneal dialysis,you have to have training on how to do it for yourself.Your supplies are delivered to your house.The main problem for most people is keeping everything sterile.It's best to have a room or walk in closet devoted to your dialysis where you do it and keep your supplies and no one else enters. (especially the family pets) Usually if you have done peritoneal dialysis for a while and have all the bugs worked out you only have to go to the dialysis center once a month to see the peritoneal nurse for a check in.

    • @denisehall4818
      @denisehall4818 7 лет назад +1

      I personally knew someone who lived 27 years on dialysis but if you are proactive,young and a clean liver you should be able to get a transplant within 5 years.

  • @elrondhubbard7059
    @elrondhubbard7059 5 лет назад +1022

    My grandpa is on dialysis but he hates socialism. Fox news is one helluva drug.

    • @sanjayaiyar4351
      @sanjayaiyar4351 4 года назад +77

      Jiminy Lummox
      Then your grandpa is an idiot. Healthcare for all is no more socialist than garbage pickup or the police force. Otherwise call them for what they are.... socialized medicine, socialized sanitation, and socialized protection.

    • @malcorub
      @malcorub 4 года назад +44

      So is gramps paying for his dialysis out of his own pocket? Or am I the tax payer...errrr Medicare paying for it?

    • @jimmyboyles2868
      @jimmyboyles2868 4 года назад +4

      There has to be an incentive for innovation and invention. If we had real competition, the technology would be way more advanced than it is now. Davita is a monopoly. Under a socialist system, there will be no innovation or invention and treatment will continue to be the same. With competition prices go way down. Look at cell phones and flat screen t.v.'s. Under a soviet system we would still be using rotary phones hung on the wall and tube t.v.'s. Dialysis patient six years.

    • @delevilme
      @delevilme 4 года назад +29

      @@jimmyboyles2868 Your innovation and invention comes from China, that's currently building hospitals to fight coronavirus, yet you use 'a soviet system' as an example for socialism, fck you.

    • @mtlewis973
      @mtlewis973 4 года назад +36

      Jimmy Boyles yes, properly funding scientific research without making scientists accountable to shareholder will stifle innovation. that makes total sense. i mean would alexander fleming have discovered penicillin if he weren’t being paid by GSK? oh wait.

  • @justinwillis3113
    @justinwillis3113 2 года назад +2

    Dialysis is free my grandpa Sumler was 82 years old when his kidneys failed him and he refused dialysis a free treatment and passed away R.I.P Charles Sumler thank you for your service in Korea I will always love you.

  • @scubasteve2169
    @scubasteve2169 3 года назад +17

    3 yrs on and the words "not properly disinfecting" have become reason enough for a criminal investigation.

    • @matthewtaylorbrown
      @matthewtaylorbrown Год назад

      I might be a jerk, but I ask to impact my filter before I'm put on. I ensure the machine ceasing has been on 1 minute overtime before I'll sit. So, they may be working on broad solutions, but for goodness sake, take charge of your own care. I had a nurse try to give me a last chance BP med, but isntead of three pills over the course of the day, she tried to tive me three pills three times, by the second dose, I was, no way lady, that will put me in a coma.

  • @GoodVolition
    @GoodVolition 7 лет назад +218

    So in a clinic with two or less stars do you get a complimentary dirty needle and naked chicken chalupa?

    • @Rox123ify
      @Rox123ify 7 лет назад +10

      sold

    • @TheKment
      @TheKment 7 лет назад +14

      Yes, but it is operated by a crack addict. With 3 stars he might be white.

    • @Peng_Pong
      @Peng_Pong 7 лет назад +1

      Chicken chalupa?
      IM IN!!!

    • @roberttrail7013
      @roberttrail7013 7 лет назад +1

      Actually, you get a naked nurse and that's not the worst thing on her resume because she's done porn, i.e., "Naughty Nurses".

    • @OlOleander
      @OlOleander 7 лет назад +5

      Robert Trail Ironically I would trust a porn nurse's cleanliness practices more. At least at a major studio. They run a tight ship. They'd lose a ton of business (and the actors could lose their careers) if folks got sick.

  • @Guinnessmonkey1
    @Guinnessmonkey1 6 лет назад +670

    Just wanted to write and say that I first saw this segment as I was recovering from a hemodialysis session at a DaVita clinic.
    A: They're every bit as awful as John Oliver portrays them. By far the worst health care I've ever had to deal with in my life.
    B: Thank you for this segment. It made me angry but at the same time grateful that someone was paying attention. I only had to do hemo for a few months before I got a transplant (my wife was a match, if you can believe it), but the look of the people who were doing it for years... just incredibly depressing stuff. Nor can I imagine thinking of DaVita as a "community." Nobody at my clinic talked to each other. Nobody. After my last session, even though everyone knew that I was getting a transplant the next day (it changed which medications they gave me) not a single member of the staff so much as said "good luck" or even "goodbye" to me at any point. They did not care.
    And there is no way that they were doing the right amount of cleaning. I was often in the chair only 10 minutes or so after the previous patient left. With my little bag where I'd have to carry in my own blanket and pillow, since DaVita doesn't have them, because they don't care. In the hospital they knew that in dialysis you can get super-cold (since your blood is out of your body), so they had heated blankets and you spent the session on a motorized hospital bed, so you could rest if you wanted. The staff worked in lower light so patients could feel more comfortable and rest. DaVita: bright lights in your face and nothing but a chair, since DaVita is to cheap to pay for laundry. I have absolutely nothing good to say about them. The one nurse I knew who actually gave a damn quit because of how the company treated patients.

    • @burntpieceoftoast4148
      @burntpieceoftoast4148 6 лет назад +34

      Michael Kohler
      Damn!
      That's just sad.
      I'm so glad you were able to get a transplant! The chances of your wife being your donor-WOW!
      Hope you are doing well and continue on that way!

    • @jackwilliams5474
      @jackwilliams5474 5 лет назад +6

      I dont Know. My wife had dialysis for 1 Year in North Dakota and they were extremely nice to her.

    • @dreamingrightnow1174
      @dreamingrightnow1174 5 лет назад +16

      Michael Kohler
      This breaks my heart and makes me furious at the same time. I'm sorry this is happening to you and others. I really had no idea until JO did this episode. I think most of us just go on about our lives and think dialysis is easy and takes care of the problem. :(

    • @camelthegamer7165
      @camelthegamer7165 5 лет назад +9

      I think I drive past one of these dangerous places every day, and to think the Taco Bell across the street is safer than a highly profitable procedure that is guaranteed paid for... If I ever found myself in a similar situation. Shit.

    • @duaynedraffen9319
      @duaynedraffen9319 5 лет назад +15

      I'm sorry to hear about your experience at the clinic, but very happy you got a quick transplant. I undergo my dialysis at a DaVita clinic in the New York City area. I agree with much of what you said, but I've been lucky to find a few staff members there, including the head nurse, who do seem to care and do the best under the corporate circumstances.

  • @hybridepigenes
    @hybridepigenes 3 года назад +1

    John Oliver you are a beautiful human being. Thank you for your public service.

  • @gregtrent3335
    @gregtrent3335 Год назад +13

    I have been on dialysis for 15 years: so far, I get excellent care by my facility through Davita dialysis. However, there are some shitty facilities out there. I am covered by Medicare & state Medicaid; so, when I got my bill, my portion to pay was zero; but, the taxpayer's portion was forty thousand dollars for one month! There has got to be some over inflated fraud in that bill.

    • @cwoodadc
      @cwoodadc Год назад +1

      That is how much they billed Medicare, but Medicare only pays about 300 per treatment

  • @JanetEsq
    @JanetEsq 5 лет назад +181

    "Spends the most and gets the least." That's the whole US health care system.

    • @mammawlee
      @mammawlee Год назад

      Not ALL doctors and techs are Jenks. I have had some very good medical care. And there have been times l wanted to push a doctor out of a window.

  • @Pun2404
    @Pun2404 7 лет назад +113

    That was one of the *BEST* ''Cool..''s of the series!

  • @Lambodera
    @Lambodera 2 года назад +2

    God damn... I was on the transplant waiting list for six years - five of which I spent on dialysis - before getting my transplant. I can't imagine not even being told you could get one until after five years of treatments had gone by, and THEN having to wait for that call.
    I'm very lucky in that my nephrologist runs his own small, private clinic, and isn't affiliated with any of these so-called "health management" companies. The nurses and techs there actually cared about my well-being (physical, as well as mental and emotional) and ten years post-transplant I am still grateful to them every day for that. I never would have survived the numerous disappointments of calls that were false alarms or my declining health during my last year I was on treatment before finally getting my new kidney if it wasn't for them.

  • @hannahgrant6138
    @hannahgrant6138 3 года назад +7

    I was thinking of this video when trying to decide on Prop 23 in CA.

  • @DeAnoJackson
    @DeAnoJackson 7 лет назад +19

    One of my closest friends has worked for DaVita for well over 15 years, and I've heard stories from her. Because of that I already knew most of this, but didn't know how deeply it ran.

  • @223Drone
    @223Drone 7 лет назад +465

    The whole idea of a "healthcare industry" is just revolting. Healthcare is a right it shouldn't be a privilege.

    • @jeff14610
      @jeff14610 5 лет назад +7

      DeadlyMargiKarp223 me and you have similar viewpoints, but it’s just not that simple where there is money being spent someone has to win and someone has to lose its just how it works healthcare providers are run by business men who only see a guaranteed demand and a limited supply why wouldn’t they capitalize

    • @fardimnazir666
      @fardimnazir666 5 лет назад +4

      Exactly.

    • @jameskevinheinle301
      @jameskevinheinle301 5 лет назад +2

      Mahmoud Eltaher so in other words I'm saying to just drain that swamp entirely out. we aren't born with an attached medical electronic device either, so who is making it life or death get jacked requirement?
      same evil killers making all the cigarettes,dope,cancer,wars,pollutions,or at least the crooks who are jacking on it all and that's how they go, all the way around. in the water,food,air,plastic containers etc. so they should jack it all out right back.no more kidney machine corporation profit rights for ANYBODY OR ANYTHING! pay back by sentenced to uncover and undo all extension damages and extortion,provide continually free services to those affected and dependant and denied access due to (poverty, which is actually injustices, reversed ,=justice/wealth plus charity,in one, always, like a list of sum parts in nutrients and supplements and ingredients, in one product it has several useful,powerful values,elements,from this earth....not the fucking satanist societies, humans also created by God, with us and the planets, sustainable to eternity if our market use is properly demonstrated in support of it or of our just use,acting ourselves willfully,this you CAN SEE ONE BY ONE, IN REAL TIME and how merciful is he to extend a length of slack BEFORE JUST Wham!JACKING!
      To just start at step one SEVER is to deny a human his life, even the the their who gets away fast and eventually circulates the price in damages to everyone full circuit, is a far more just and forgiving way, that we all spread the burden, reducing ,not pay in one life, likely innocent of the crime the original
      only God,who is so modest and gracious to spare his image being seen by us, least we point and spread slander to his image identify then end him...be careful with justice for all, and deprive no life, liberty, but the exclusively beneficial product and profit used for killing same as gunshots but no trace accountability plus a lie of impossibility, that's what WITCHES do to upgrade technology into evil, a step too far beyond the scope of fair market value and access like net and info neutrality. that is NO DICE. DRAIN the SWAMP and chain their smoking asses to serve in penitence to their victims!

    • @doomedbringer
      @doomedbringer 5 лет назад +6

      dont forget that in the US, if you get taken to a hospital without your knowledge, like accident or something, you are then taken to a hospital where many expensive treatments will be used to save your life, you would then be saddled with a bill you couldnt possibly pay off in your lifetime

    • @Dichtsau
      @Dichtsau 5 лет назад +1

      ...if u say that, keep the following in mind: in germany we have public healthcare, BUT if u wanna be HEALED here, u have to be private insuranced. u can only get private insurance as long as u NEVER had ANYTHING and once u left the private insurance (maybe because u didn't have the money), u can never get back into it because until there u have had something for sure.
      the "public healthcare" is just a giant lootbox for the pharma industry, tho for the rich ppl there is the private thingy. u could also name the system "kill the poor or keep em addicted - long life & health is only for the elite"....

  • @brysonhanefeld76
    @brysonhanefeld76 2 года назад +2

    My mom used to work for Davita and basically confirmed everything you said

  • @Theluckypessimist
    @Theluckypessimist 3 года назад +3

    They guy is 💯 right about the transitions! It’s too fast! Way too fast! The staff wants to spend more time with the patients but it’s a rush. I will say the patients are very impatient. They scream if they wait 5mins in the waiting room.

    • @laurelparker3171
      @laurelparker3171 2 года назад +2

      Yes, there is that side too - as a patient, I have seen both. BUT the biggest problem there is communication. IF you took 15 minutes at the start of the first dialysis time to train patients in their role, so much could be avoided. Also, there should be a print out for them to take home and share with caregivers. And inform caregivers separately, for those non compliant patients who do their best to sabotage care.

  • @justthecoolestdudeyo9446
    @justthecoolestdudeyo9446 7 лет назад +95

    That lady in the beginning is the spirit animal that I need. I hope she keeps as healthy as she can be

  • @mikeyunovapix7181
    @mikeyunovapix7181 5 лет назад +184

    we are now on the verge of making the first artificial kidney to not only ease the strain on organ donations but also reduce the need for dialysis. I'm really hoping the artificial kidney turns out to save many lives.

    • @zestorm6233
      @zestorm6233 4 года назад +21

      it will probably be privatised and make someone a lot of money. as for the person who needs it id argue they are absolutely screwd if they arent rich

    • @laurelparker3171
      @laurelparker3171 2 года назад

      actually, no, we aren't. Dialysis is an artificial kidney and when we are able ti implant one it will have many of the same problems. Yes, it will be able to constantly clean our blood, but for what? Science does not yet know everything kidneys do. I've spoken to several nephrologists about this. They agree - pig kidneys will come first - and they turned out to be right. Meanwhile, the live donor system has been revolutionized, so finding a match is far easier and making that match more precise is more doable.

    • @laurelparker3171
      @laurelparker3171 2 года назад +2

      @@zestorm6233 everyone is on the same playing field in end stage renal disease, financially speaking. We all get Medicare. it covers dialysis, transplant, and the medical costs of the live donor are covered by the recipient's medicare. Pauper and millionaire get exactly the same

    • @russziegler2093
      @russziegler2093 Год назад +3

      unfortunitely this has been the case for years they still havent got it i almost think they are preventing it for money greed

  • @EternalYorkieMom
    @EternalYorkieMom 3 года назад +7

    John: Your pet only loves you because you feed it
    Me: EXCUSE YOU!! My pet also loves me because he loves being pet and having someone of another species to bend to his every whim!

  • @CyberGenesis1
    @CyberGenesis1 6 лет назад +750

    If your doctor hasn't put you on transplant list before sending you to Dialysis - your doctor shouldn't have a license

    • @oscarfun100
      @oscarfun100 5 лет назад +13

      I live in Hungary and I'm on dialysis for a few months now. And I'm not on the transplant list yet. I'm 35 years old and I'm in a great shape, except of course my kidneys. So I could be on the list already. But for some reason that's not how this work. At least not in this country. There's about 6000 people on dialysis in my country. Guess how many are on the transplant list for kidney? About 300...

    • @shelbycazares4417
      @shelbycazares4417 5 лет назад +40

      That is so short sided. Do you even know what goes into being put on the transplant list? You have to be considered healthy otherwise before you can qualify for a transplant. Some patients need immediate dialysis and don't have time to go through the testing to be put on the list. You don't just get your name added to the list. Do some research on the process. I've gone through it. It took me 2 months before I was officially put on the list. If my doctor waited until I was on the list before sending me to dialysis, I would've died.

    • @alchemicpunk1509
      @alchemicpunk1509 5 лет назад +5

      Yeah that one is on the dialysis clinics. Though the doctor should make it clear that a transplant is much better they need to send you to dialysis treatment first. And whatever facility you get that at needs to inform you about transplants and put you on a list once eligible.

    • @ambrawroninstagram
      @ambrawroninstagram 5 лет назад +6

      CyberGenesis I know this comment is old but my heart practically stopped. My nephrologist told me to get on the list I had to be on dialysis. Your comment made me google and I feel horribly misled. But thank you. Thank you so so much. You’ve probably saved me.

    • @kissmeimiris1
      @kissmeimiris1 5 лет назад +2

      I do believe in being on the transplant list. Patients should be educated on transplant. But everyone has a different definition of quality of life. Some patients are actually not interested even after much education.

  • @matthewtaylorbrown
    @matthewtaylorbrown Год назад +2

    How odd, they said in the Fox News clip (eye roll) kidney patients weren't fully aware of transplants before starting dialysis. Duh! A lot of people find out they need dialysis all of a sudden, they have to start dialysis, you can't wait for a transplant. You become educated in all the processes while on dialysis. Some people had plenty of time to get educated, but there was no kidney in sight for me, I had to get in the chair eventually. But did get a transplant 6 months later and after 13 years, I'm still doing working. Dialysis is nothing less than outpatient life-support. If you are in stage 4 for a while maybe you get a kidney from the list or the secondary list before you even go on dialysis, but they made it sound cheaper. I cost (may have changed) about $10,000/mo for my dialysis (no cost to me), the transplant was over $350,000 as they also had to take out two football sized kidneys first. Then the drugs I take (no cost to me) is about $5,000/mo, so it takes a while before there is a return on the investment of a transplant and some of them fail right away or soon after, with no return on investment. So, big pictures, I'm not sure which is cheaper or safer for the patients. And this 50% death rate for the first year and 65% for the second year is complete unfounded BS. We lost one guy at my center in the entire year I was aware of the DaVita center I attended for six months, he was 95 years old and had been on dialysis for over 10 years and had chronic heart disease. We didn't see a single case of infections.

  • @MisterNohbdy
    @MisterNohbdy 4 года назад +32

    "That is a *great* accent and I do *not* apologize for it."
    Well yeah, that's exactly why it's not, John. You gotta play the part.
    also I just realized John's "...Cool." is basically the original "okay, boomer"

  • @SophiaCaton
    @SophiaCaton 7 лет назад +6

    my mom has been on dialysis for many years and she's only 36. It's not only for old people and it Is a serious problem. Dialysis literally stands in between her life and death. It wears her out and the sad thing is so many people get so tired of it they stop showing up to dialysis and die. That's how much it tires people

  • @samdp42
    @samdp42 6 лет назад +8

    I am a former DaVita employee. The expectation of turn over was so unreal. You never had time to fully meet regs. To do everything you have to within regulation you needed 20 to 25 minutes. At my clinic we had 15 min to get the patient off the machine and treatment started for the next. No time for butadiene to dry or heparin to run for 5 minutes the way it should.