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American Samoa dialysis patients on Day 3 without treatment - Chattanooga Times Free Press
This June 3, 2015 photo provided by the Samoa News shows Dialysis Head Nurse Olita Tafiti in the storage room where liquid bicarbonate concentrate is stored at the LBJ Medical Center in the U.S. territory of American Samoa. A fresh supply of a dialysis product needed for the treatment of renal failure was expected to be delivered to American Samoa on Friday, June 5 after a recall forced the only hospital on the island to stop treatments. (Joyetter Feagaimaalii-Luamanu/Samoa News via AP)

Photo by The Associated Press/Times Free Press.

PAGO PAGO, American Samoa (AP) - American Samoa residents who require dialysis were in their third day Friday without access to the vital treatment after a product recall closed their clinic, but so far none have sought emergency medical attention, the U.S. territory's only hospital said.

A fresh supply of the product - a solution used in dialysis machines at LBJ Medical Center - was to arrive at the island later in the day. The clinic is set to reopen early Saturday after shutting down Wednesday morning.

In the meantime, its roughly 160 patients are being told to follow diet and fluid restrictions, and to go to the hospital emergency room with any complications. As of about noon Friday, none of them had gone to the ER, according to emergency room nurses.

How long a patient can safely go without dialysis depends on factors such as health condition and age, said Dr. Anjay Rastogi, director the dialysis program at the University of California, Los Angeles.

Generally, patients require the treatment three times a week, with some cases requiring four treatments, Rastogi said. Some patients can go a week without dialysis, but some with no kidney function can go only three or four days, he said.

"The short end of it, it's very time-sensitive," Rastogi said, adding he's especially concerned about those who might not have had dialysis since Monday.

He noted any contamination in the solution used for dialysis could be fatal.

Once the clinic reopens, Rastogi said he recommends the hospital have in place a system for triaging patients to determine who needs dialysis right away and who can wait a bit.

The recalled solution was from off-island supplier Fresenius Medical Care. Its North American headquarters is in Waltham, Massachusetts.

The recall occurred after sample testing showed the substance - NaturaLyte Liquid Bicarbonate Concentrate- might eventually develop bacteria levels that exceed acceptable limits, Fresenius spokesman Jon Stone said.

The company expedited the shipment of replacement liquid bicarbonate that's expected to arrive Friday, Stone said.

Dialysis unit nurse manager Olita Tafiti said the clinic will reopen at 1 a.m. Saturday and will stay open all weekend for those who had appointments scheduled for Wednesday through Saturday. Regularly scheduled appointments will resume Monday.

Until Saturday, there are no other options for dialysis patients on the island with a population of about 55,000, roughly 2,300 miles south of Hawaii.

___

Associated Press writer Jennifer Sinco Kelleher in Honolulu contributed to this report.

...

 
Davita Healthcare Partners Inc. (DVA) Files Form 4 Insider Selling : Robert J ... - News Watch International

Davita Healthcare Partners Inc. (DVA): Robert J Margolis , Co-Chairman of the Board of Davita Healthcare Partners Inc. sold 31,400 shares on Jun 3, 2015. The Insider selling transaction was disclosed on Jun 5, 2015 to the Securities and Exchange Commission. The shares were sold at $83.41 per share for a total value of $2,618,460.50.

Company has disclosed other insider transaction to SEC, The Securities and Exchange Commission has divulged that Staffieri Michael David, officer (COO, Kidney Care) of Davita Healthcare Partners Inc., had unloaded 9,050 shares at an average price of $84.07 in a transaction dated on May 28, 2015. The total value of the transaction was worth $760,834. Shares of DaVita healthCare Partners Inc. (NYSE:DVA) ended Thursday session in red amid volatile trading. The shares closed down 1.36 points or 1.62% at $82.6 with 855,383 shares getting traded. Post opening the session at $83.63, the shares hit an intraday low of $82.45 and an intraday high of $83.93 and the price vacillated in this range throughout the day. The company has a market cap of $17,754 million and the number of outstanding shares has been calculated to be 214,941,000 shares. The 52-week high of DaVita healthCare Partners Inc. (NYSE:DVA) is $85.17 and the 52-week low is $69.83.

2.76% of the shares are held by the company Insiders, 83.6% of the shares are held by the institutions. Company shares has an average 3 month share volume of 1,097,360 and an average 10 day volume is recorded to be 755,343 The company has received recommendation from many analysts. 5 analysts have rated the company as a strong buy. The shares has been rated as hold from 7 Wall Street Analysts. 1 analysts have suggested buy for the company. Underperform rating was given by 1 analyst.

DaVita HealthCare Partners Inc., formerly DaVita Inc., is a provider of dialysis services in the United States for patients suffering from chronic kidney failure, also known as end stage renal disease (ESRD). As of December 31, 2011, the Company provided dialysis and administrative services through a network of 1,809 outpatient dialysis centers located in the United States throughout 43 states and the District of Columbia, serving a total of approximately 142,000 patients. It also provides acute inpatient dialysis services in approximately 900 hospitals and related laboratory services throughout the United States. In July 2013, DaVita, a division of DaVita HealthCare Partners Inc announced the acquisition of the dialysis operations of Malaysia’s Caring Dialysis Centre Group (CDC Group) by DVA (Malaysia) Sdn Bhd.

...

 
American Samoa dialysis patients on Day 3 without treatment - Times Daily
American Samoa dialysis clinic reopens after 2-day closure

American Samoa dialysis clinic reopens after 2-day closure

This June 3, 2015 photo provided by the Samoa News shows Dialysis Head Nurse Olita Tafiti in the storage room where liquid bicarbonate concentrate is stored at the LBJ Medical Center in the U.S. territory of American Samoa. A fresh supply of a dialysis product needed for the treatment of renal failure was expected to be delivered to American Samoa on Friday, June 5 after a recall forced the only hospital on the island to stop treatments. (Joyetter Feagaimaalii-Luamanu/Samoa News via AP)

American Samoa dialysis clinic reopens after 2-day closure

American Samoa dialysis clinic reopens after 2-day closure

This Friday, June 5, 2015 photo shows the entrance to the territorial government owned Fagaalu hospital, the LBJ Tropical Medical Center, in Fagaalu, American Samoa. Residents who require dialysis were in their third day without the vital treatment Friday, after a product recall closed their clinic, but so far none have sought emergency medical attention, the U.S. territory's only hospital said. Until Saturday, there are no other options for dialysis patients on the island with a population of about 55,000, roughly 2,300 miles south of Hawaii. (AP Photo/Fili Sagapolutele)

American Samoa dialysis clinic reopens after 2-day closure

American Samoa dialysis clinic reopens after 2-day closure

A public notice posted on one of the side doors of the Dialysis Clinic informs patients that due to problems with its dialysis solutions, treatments are been put on hold at the LBJ Medical Center, in Fagaalu, American Samoa Friday, June 5, 2015. Residents who require dialysis were in their third day without the vital treatment Friday after a product recall closed their clinic, but so far none have sought emergency medical attention, the U.S. territory's only hospital said. Until Saturday, there are no other options for dialysis patients on the island with a population of about 55,000, roughly 2,300 miles south of Hawaii. (AP Photo/Fili Sagapolutele)

American Samoa dialysis clinic reopens after 2-day closure

American Samoa dialysis clinic reopens after 2-day closure

A public notice posted on one of the side doors of the Dialysis Clinic informs patients that due to problems with its dialysis solutions, treatments are been put on hold at the LBJ Medical Center, in Fagaalu, American Samoa on Friday, June 5, 2015. Residents who require dialysis were in their third day without the vital treatment Friday after a product recall closed their clinic, but so far none have sought emergency medical attention, the U.S. territory's only hospital said. Until Saturday, there are no other options for dialysis patients on the island with a population of about 55,000, roughly 2,300 miles south of Hawaii. (AP Photo/Fili Sagapolutele)

Posted: Saturday, June 6, 2015 12:00 am | Updated: 3:00 am, Sat Jun 6, 2015.

PAGO PAGO, American Samoa (AP) — American Samoa's only dialysis clinic reopened Friday after a product recall forced it to close for two days.

LBJ Medical Center said the clinic reopened at 4 p.m. Friday and began treating patients who require dialysis. The clinic shut down Wednesday after the hospital learned of a recall of a solution used in its machines. A fresh supply arrived to the island around 2 p.m. Friday. The clinic had been scheduled to reopen at 1 a.m. Saturday.

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American Samoa dialysis patients on Day 3 without treatment - Bay News 9

(AP) American Samoa residents who require dialysis were in their third day Friday without access to the vital treatment after a product recall closed their clinic, but so far none have sought emergency medical attention, the U.S. territory's only hospital said.

A fresh supply of the product a solution used in dialysis machines at LBJ Medical Center was to arrive at the island later in the day. The clinic is set to reopen early Saturday after shutting down Wednesday morning.

In the meantime, its roughly 160 patients are being told to follow diet and fluid restrictions, and to go to the hospital emergency room with any complications. As of about noon Friday, none of them had gone to the ER, according to emergency room nurses.

How long a patient can safely go without dialysis depends on factors such as health condition and age, said Dr. Anjay Rastogi, director the dialysis program at the University of California, Los Angeles.

Generally, patients require the treatment three times a week, with some cases requiring four treatments, Rastogi said. Some patients can go a week without dialysis, but some with no kidney function can go only three or four days, he said.

"The short end of it, it's very time-sensitive," Rastogi said, adding he's especially concerned about those who might not have had dialysis since Monday.

He noted any contamination in the solution used for dialysis could be fatal.

Once the clinic reopens, Rastogi said he recommends the hospital have in place a system for triaging patients to determine who needs dialysis right away and who can wait a bit.

The recalled solution was from off-island supplier Fresenius Medical Care. Its North American headquarters is in Waltham, Massachusetts.

The recall occurred after sample testing showed the substance NaturaLyte Liquid Bicarbonate Concentrate might eventually develop bacteria levels that exceed acceptable limits, Fresenius spokesman Jon Stone said.

The company expedited the shipment of replacement liquid bicarbonate that's expected to arrive Friday, Stone said.

Dialysis unit nurse manager Olita Tafiti said the clinic will reopen at 1 a.m. Saturday and will stay open all weekend for those who had appointments scheduled for Wednesday through Saturday. Regularly scheduled appointments will resume Monday.

Until Saturday, there are no other options for dialysis patients on the island with a population of about 55,000, roughly 2,300 miles south of Hawaii.

___

Associated Press writer Jennifer Sinco Kelleher in Honolulu contributed to this report.

...

 
American Samoa dialysis patients on Day 3 without treatment - Yahoo News UK

PAGO PAGO, American Samoa (AP) — American Samoa's only dialysis clinic reopened Friday after a product recall forced it to close for two days.

LBJ Medical Center said the clinic reopened at 4 p.m. Friday and began treating patients who require dialysis. The clinic shut down Wednesday after the hospital learned of a recall of a solution used in its machines. A fresh supply arrived to the island around 2 p.m. Friday. The clinic had been scheduled to reopen at 1 a.m. Saturday.

Those being treated Friday to Sunday are patients who had appointments scheduled for Wednesday through Saturday. Regularly scheduled appointments are expected to resume Monday.

"Those who came in say that they knew that the cargo flight had landed and decided to come to the hospital — taking their chances that the clinic will open thereafter," said dialysis unit nurse manager Olita Tafiti. "I guess word got out quickly that the shipment did in fact arrive on island."

Tafiti said three dialysis patients admitted themselves to the emergency room early Friday afternoon, and they were the first to get treatment when the clinic opened.

Until Friday, there were no other options for dialysis patients on the island with a population of about 55,000, roughly 2,300 miles south of Hawaii.

The recalled solution was from off-island supplier Fresenius Medical Care. Its North American headquarters is in Waltham, Massachusetts.

The recall occurred after sample testing showed the substance — NaturaLyte Liquid Bicarbonate Concentrate — might eventually develop bacteria levels that exceed acceptable limits, Fresenius spokesman Jon Stone said.

The company expedited the shipment of replacement liquid bicarbonate to American Samoa, Stone said.

How long a patient can safely go without dialysis depends on factors such as health condition and age, said Dr. Anjay Rastogi, director the dialysis program at the University of California, Los Angeles.

Generally, patients require the treatment three times a week, with some cases requiring four treatments, Rastogi said. Some patients can go a week without dialysis, but some with no kidney function can go only three or four days, he said.

"The short end of it, it's very time-sensitive," Rastogi said, adding he's especially concerned about those who might not have had dialysis since Monday.

He noted any contamination in the solution used for dialysis could be fatal.

Another shipment is due to arrive Friday night from Honolulu on Hawaiian Airlines, the only carrier connecting American Samoa to the U.S.

Additionally, a U.S. military flight is scheduled to arrive Monday afternoon from Honolulu with the rest of the supplies, Tafiti said.

___

Associated Press writer Jennifer Sinco Kelleher in Honolulu contributed to this report.

...

 
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