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A Patient Care Technician Who Can Relate: Brian ColemanĢýs Kidney Disease Journey

A Patient Care Technician Who Can Relate: Brian ColemanĢýs Kidney Disease Journey

When people on dialysis ask patient care technician (PCT) Brian Coleman for advice, they know heĢýs got answers. Coleman has kidney failure, so he understands what home dialysis, transplants, and in-center dialysis are like. ĢýMy patients say they love having someone in the clinic who really understands what they mean when they say theyĢýre feeling bad,Ģý he says. ĢýBecause I know their exact feelings, I can really relate to them and give them a little extra insight.Ģý

Kidney disease has always been a part of ColemanĢýs life and working in the Fresenius Kidney Care center in Baton Rouge has helped him make the most of his experiences. ĢýI love what I do,Ģý he says. ĢýWhat better way of giving back to the doctors and nurses who helped me than by helping other people in my situation?Ģý

Firsthand Experience

Coleman was born with a rare condition that caused kidney failure, so he began peritoneal dialysis (PD) as an infant. By age two, he needed his first kidney transplant. Fortunately, his mother was a match, and she was able to donate a kidney to her son. Coleman was successful with his donated kidney for 17 years before he needed another transplant Ģý this time, from his father.

Medication complications damaged his second kidney, and while he did regain some kidney function after adjusting the medications, Coleman would soon begin hemodialysis. A lifetime of managing kidney disease had prepared him for this eventuality. ĢýA lot of people ask me how I handled it, but it was something I was always prepared for,Ģý Coleman says. ĢýIt was just another milestone in my life.Ģý

While he did in-center dialysis treatments, Coleman went to school to become a medical assistant. This education made him more interested in his own dialysis treatments, and as Coleman recalls, ĢýOne day, I just got a little curious and asked if I could insert my own needle.Ģý His dialysis nurse encouraged him to give it a try. ĢýI thought it was fairly easy because I had training from school,Ģý Coleman says, and he began inserting his own needles at every session. He adds, ĢýIĢýve talked to people in the center, and they say they couldnĢýt see themselves doing their own needles. I tell them, ĢýNobody knows your access better than you, and it gets easier every time.ĢýĢý While Coleman felt like he benefitted from his medical training, many patients begin home dialysis with no medical background.

ColemanĢýs care team recognized his success and urged him to make the most of his experiences. He says, ĢýThey were like, ĢýWell since youĢýre inserting needles yourself and youĢýre already in the medical field, how would you feel about working at a dialysis center?ĢýĢý

Gratitude and Giving Back

ColemanĢýs interest in the medical field began in childhood; his health conditions made him more susceptible to illness, and he was frequently hospitalized. ĢýThatĢýs what I was always around growing up, so thatĢýs what interested me,Ģý he says. ĢýWhen I was five or six years old, I wanted to be a doctor of course, but eight years of school? ThatĢýs not for me,Ģý Coleman laughs. ĢýBut I still wanted to be in the medical field. IĢýve seen how hard these people work to care for other people. I wanted to give back to those people who helped me.Ģý

Coleman called on his medical education as well as his experience performing his own dialysis treatments and was soon hired as a PCT. At that time, Coleman was still learning to perform his own dialysis treatments at home. He found himself quickly learning to operate both his home machine and those in the center.

ĢýIĢým not going to lie, at first I thought, ĢýThatĢýs just too much.Ģý IĢýd be going from doing dialysis at the clinic and then going home to set myself up,Ģý Coleman says, expressing concern that dialysis would take over his life. But thinking back to what led him to this point, Coleman realized he was capable of striking a balance between dialysis at home and work Ģý and, in fact, it was dialysis that gave him the freedom to work full time. He was ready to make a difference in the lives of others with kidney disease.

Job Satisfaction

As a PCT at a Fresenius Kidney Care center, Coleman works closely with people on dialysis by assisting with treatments, tracking their progress, and sharing experiences. Although Coleman does his treatments at home, he takes comfort in spending time in-center with other people. ĢýI talk to them while theyĢýre on the machines and it takes my mind off my own situation. I love listening to their stories, they listen to mine, and we can relate to each other in a very special way.Ģý

Coleman is especially grateful that working in a dialysis center gives him the opportunity to connect with patients in a new way. ĢýIn other jobs, I was seeing the patients for 30 minutes, then theyĢýre gone. But these patients are here in the center for hours, so thereĢýs nothing to do but chat and get to know people. ThatĢýs the highlight of my day. ItĢýs a joy to see patients come in and then leave feeling a little better.Ģý

Interested in using your experiences to help people with kidney disease thrive? Visitto see available opportunities.

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