Battery in replace mode for 6 mo

I was told Tuesday the 13th that my battery has been in replacement mode since last January.  I did have a appt. schedule for January but I needed to cancel it.  In July of 2016 my battery had 19 months life left, so I thought I would be safe.  Well, i guess i was wrong and as I said it has been in replace mode since Jan 2017.  I am 100% dependant on the pacemaker and was told Medtronic quarantee it will still work for 4 mo past replacement mode.  So. the question if I am 6 mo in replacement mode, what is going to happen.  Will it just quite and I will die?  I do not have medical insurance.  At the office on Tuesday I was told to apply for finicial aid and they would get in contact with me to schedule a surgery date and I was given paperwork to fill out and send to business/insurance office for finicial aid. If there was ANY danger of me walking out, dirving home and living with this in replacement mode, would they have let me leave the office?   What happen if I am driving and the battery suddendly stops and me being 100% will I die and possiblity hurt/klll someone.  I honesty just thoght of this today.   I tried to contact business/insurance offices and got sooooo much run around and NO answers.  I called and spoke with pacemaker cilinc to ask of the dangers and if the battery could suddenly stop and if it is safe for me to drive etc.  No one would really give me any clear answers because they said they would have no way of knowing if the battery would stop at any given time while I wait for insurance/business to let me know if i qualify for aid.  My Only income is SS benefits from my late husband.  So, do I just wait and hope not to die whild I wait?  I live in the Dallas area any my doctor is at the Jack and Jane cardiac/vascullar hospital which is part of Baylor.  So, does anybody know how long a pacemaker in replace mode can really last?  Am I safe to drive etc. any help would be appreciated.

 


3 Comments

RYLN

by Grateful Heart - 2017-06-16 11:19:27

Did you do any of the suggestions we gave you two weeks ago?  What did the patient advocate or your state representatives say?

We have been trying to help you but you have to take the next step.  Get a report from your doctor stating your device is in EOL mode and needs replacing.  Go to social services with it and get the paperwork started.  I worked for social services many, many years ago in NY.  If not at all qualified, they would approve "Emergency Medicaid" for needed surgeries/ life saving measures.  I know there are many changes in government but I would think that has not changed.  

The lines were always long so take a book or magazine with you and maybe some water.

Just one more note:  My understanding is most people do not feel better when their device stops working.  Robin is unique.

Grateful Heart 

end of service

by Tracey_E - 2017-06-16 12:00:24

So, fill out the paperwork and schedule a surgery date!!! I'm not sure why you're delaying? You need to be proactive, follow Grateful Heart's advice with the doctors and hospital. Do you qualify for Medicaid? Fill out their paperwork and take it from there. When someone doesn't call back, follow up. When someone gives you the runaround, ask for a supervisor. Advocate for yourself. You aren't going to die. What you are going to do is feel really bad. Take care of it now, before that happens. 

Are you still in replacement mode or did it switch to end of service (EOS) mode? Each one lasts 3-6 months so it's not going to turn off yet. Once it changes to EOS you still have about 3 months until it turns off but you won't feel good during that time because it has limited function. Once it turns off at the end of EOS, your heart will do what it did before you were paced. Just because we pace every beat doesn't mean the heart doesn't beat on its own. Dependent doesn't mean the heart will stop with out it, just  means it will slow down a lot. Some are safe to drive, some are not. They should be able to tell you what your underlying rate is. Mine has been anywhere from 20 to 60. At 60, I could function. At 20, I would not be driving, would not be doing much but sitting and watching the world spin around me with my blue lips. There is no need to let it get to this point. Make the call. 

Sounds like you need clarity

by Gotrhythm - 2017-06-16 13:12:56

Having no personal experience and no expertise, I don't really know whether it's safe to drive or not. If it was me, I'd probably think well it's about as safe today as it was yesterday.

I do know when a friend needed an emergency pacemaker for neurogenic vaso-vagal syncope, the doctor made it clear that it wasn't safe for her to drive--whether she was feeling well or not. She could just pass out at any time for seemingly no reason and with no warning.

But that's probably not the case with you. Still, time's a-wasting, girl!

After I read your post a couple of times, I began to wonder if you were asking the question you really wanted the answer to, if you know what I mean. And if the answers you got actually helped you know how to take the next step.

Feel free to message me privately if you'd like a more personal discussion.

I'm not nearly as knowledgeable as many here, but I'm real good at sorting through a problem to find out the right next question to ask in order to get what you really want.

You know you're wired when...

You can take a lickin’ and keep on tickin’.

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I have a well tuned pacer. I hardly know I have it. I am 76 year old, hike and camp alone in the desert. I have more energy than I have had in a long time. The only problem is my wife wants to have a knob installed so she can turn the pacer down.