The renal unit, run end to end: enrol the patient, set the dialysis prescription, track vascular access, schedule chairs by shift, record every session, and measure adequacy, with dialysis machines linked through Veona Connect.
Veona Dialysis runs the whole renal service. Patients are enrolled as chronic ESRD or acute, on haemodialysis, haemodiafiltration, or peritoneal dialysis. A nephrologist sets the dialysis prescription, vascular access is registered and monitored, chairs and machines are scheduled by shift, and every session captures pre, intra, and post observations. Adequacy is measured with Kt/V and URR, machines link through Veona Connect for session telemetry, and every session is billed with consumables drawn from stock.
Enrol the patient with their modality and indication, then set the dialysis prescription: dialyzer, target ultrafiltration, dialysate, blood and dialysate flow rates, anticoagulation, and the frequency and duration of treatment. The prescription drives the schedule and the session record.
Track every patient's vascular access, arteriovenous fistula, graft, or tunnelled catheter, with its creation, maturation, and any complications. Access problems are surfaced before a session, so a failing fistula is caught rather than discovered on the chair.
Schedule patients into chairs and machines across each shift, so the unit runs at capacity without clashes. Each session records pre, intra, and post weight, blood pressure and heart rate, ultrafiltration achieved, blood flow, heparin, and any intradialytic events, against the machine that ran it.
Measure dialysis adequacy with Kt/V and urea reduction ratio so under-dialysis is caught and corrected. Dialysis machines link through Veona Connect like lab analyzers, so session telemetry flows into the record where the device supports it, rather than being copied off a screen by hand.
Chronic ESRD or acute, on HD, HDF, or PD.
Dialyzer, UF, dialysate, flows, and anticoagulation.
Register and monitor AVF, AVG, and catheters.
Slots per shift across chairs and machines.
Pre, intra, and post observations captured.
Kt/V and URR with under-dialysis flags.
Session telemetry from linked devices.
Per session, with dialyzers and lines from stock.
Shared with the chart and the whole hospital.
The patient is enrolled with modality and indication.
A nephrologist sets the dialysis prescription.
Patients are slotted into chairs and machines by shift.
Each session is recorded and adequacy is checked.
Haemodialysis, haemodiafiltration, and peritoneal dialysis, for both chronic ESRD and acute patients, each with its own prescription and session record.
Yes. Dialysis machines link through Veona Connect like lab analyzers, so session telemetry flows into the record where the device supports it, rather than being transcribed by hand.
Every patient's Kt/V and urea reduction ratio are measured and trended, so under-dialysis is flagged and the prescription can be adjusted.
Yes. A vascular access register tracks each patient's fistula, graft, or catheter, its maturation, and any complications, surfaced before a session so access problems are caught early.
A walkthrough of the renal unit, from enrolment to adequacy, with Connect-linked machines.