Even the best travel plan cannot prevent every problem. If you become ill, have vomiting or diarrhea, notice signs of infection, or simply feel “off,” your first move should be to contact your home dialysis clinic or the emergency on-call number they provide. They know your history and prescription and can tell you whether to adjust your fluid, hold a treatment, do an extra one, or go straight to urgent or emergency care. If symptoms are severe, such as crushing chest pain, severe shortness of breath, or stroke-like symptoms, treat it as an emergency and seek local care immediately, then contact your care team as soon as it is safe.
If a travel delay, power outage, or illness causes you to miss or shorten a treatment, do not try to “wing it.” Keep a written record of what actually happened, what you ate and drank, and any symptoms you noticed, then share that with your nurse or nephrologist as soon as you can reach them. They may adjust your next few treatments, your fluid limits, or your diet to bring you back to a safe balance. The key is to let your care team know early instead of waiting until you are home again.