I'll go home on a picc line.
I am sorry that you are having these issues. But - YOU CAN DO THIS. YOU WILL SUCCEED!
2 years ago I had a PICC line for 4 weeks. I did my own infusions at home, which was very convenient. My lessons from this experience are listed below.
- My PICC line was installed at the hospital. It was no worse than getting an IV line installed.
- Talk with your medical team several days before scheduled release to coordinate with the home health team who will help you with the PICC line maintenance, provide you with the antibiotics syringes, etc, when you go home. You don't want your hospital release delayed because a home health care nurse cannot schedule a meeting with you.
- Every week they shipped me a box of antibiotics syringes, saline syringes, etc, in an insulated 18"x18"x24" box. I'm normally home during the day, and I live in a nice quiet are in Iowa, USA, so that box could safely sit on my front steps for a couple hours. Consider how your supplies will get shipped to you. My antibiotics needed refrigeration, so I had a shoebox size container in the refrigerator.
- I had to infuse antibiotics every 8 hours. It took about 15 minutes of
careful activity. Clean the end of the PICC line. Flush the PICC line with a saline syringe. Clean the PICC line end. Slowly infuse the antibiotics for 2 minutes. Clean the PICC line end. Flush the PICC line with another saline syringe. Clean the PICC line end. No interruptions from pets, significant others, children, phones, etc! You also need a place to spread out your kit while you do this work.
- I tracked my activity on a paper to ensure I remembered to do the infusions 3 times each day; you don't want to miss a dose, nor do you want to double dose. I also used an alarm as a reminder.
- Since I was doing this during the winter in Iowa, I had a sweatshirt with cutoff sleeves so I could stay warm during this task. My PICC line was on the inside of my triceps on my left arm.
- The nurse who installed my PICC line said exercise and normal activities were all fine, just don't put pull on the PICC line itself.
- Once a week a home health care nurse came to my house to clean and inspect the PICC line.
- I could take showers, but I needed to keep the water off the PICC line. Being an aerospace engineer, I wrapped a thin towel around my upper arm over the PICC line, then I put an open ended plastic bag over the towel with rubber bands, then I wrapped the bag with Glad PressNSeal, and then I sealed the ends of this plastic tube with athletic tape.
I hope this information helps.
Note: If I need to be hospitalized again for an extended stay, I will ask for a PICC line instead of an IV line, because my IV lines wear out after a few days, and after a few weeks, both arms are worn out.