"I was managing my husband's peritoneal dialysis deliveries alone for 8 months. Someone in Nephron sent me a spreadsheet they'd built. I cried for an hour."
Lorraine T.
PD Caregiver · 3 years
My GFR dropped to 22 and I thought my life was over. Six months in this group and I finally stopped reading my labs like a death sentence.
Deborah M.
Stage 3b CKD · Member since 2022
Members
4,200+
Diagnoses
CKD 1–5
A quiet room where kidney patients, dialysis veterans, and transplant hopefuls find people who already know what a 3 AM cramp feels like.
This is the exact phrase typed into search engines by 14,000 people every month. If you've typed it too — you're not alone, and the answer is more nuanced than anything Google will tell you.
Stage 3 CKD means your kidneys are working at 30–59% efficiency. It does not automatically progress. With the right management, many people remain stable at Stage 3 for decades. The difference between fear and facts is a community that's already lived the answer.
What matters
Going it alone
With Nephron
Understanding your GFR number
Googling "GFR 22 life expectancy" at midnight and spiraling
Members with the same eGFR explain what it actually means for daily life
Emotional processing
Carrying the fear privately; family tries to help but doesn't understand
People who've sat with the same fear tell you exactly what helped them
Tracking disease progression
Every lab result feels like a verdict with no context
Learn which numbers matter most and how to read trends, not panic over single values
Knowing when to worry
Every new symptom triggers a Google spiral
Members distinguish normal CKD symptoms from actual warning signs — from lived experience
Preparing for nephrologist visits
Forgetting the important questions in the appointment
Access a community-built question bank reviewed by stage and treatment type
Not necessarily — and the factors that influence this are things you can actually work with. But nobody explains that clearly in a 15-minute appointment. That's what this community is for.
Most Stage 3 CKD patients never reach dialysis. Progression depends on blood pressure control, diet, medication adherence, and the underlying cause. Members who've navigated this exact fork in the road are here to walk you through it.
What matters
Going it alone
With Nephron
Understanding modality options
Only hearing about hemodialysis; peritoneal dialysis feels unfamiliar and scary
Members on both modalities share honest, unfiltered daily experiences
Preparing emotionally
The word "dialysis" feels like a cliff edge
Post-dialysis members describe what the first session actually felt like — and that they drove themselves home
Supply and logistics (PD)
Managing delivery schedules, storage, and supply shortages alone
Caregivers share tracking spreadsheets, supplier contacts, and backup plans
Diet and restrictions
Generic kidney diet sheets that feel impossible to follow
Real recipes, substitutions, and restaurant strategies from people eating the same way
Knowing your rights
Unsure what accommodations employers or insurers must provide
Members share legal resources, accommodation letters, and insurance navigation guides
This question comes up in our community more than almost any other. The diagnosis is yours to carry, but you shouldn't have to carry the explaining alone.
There is no perfect script. But there are people here who've had every version of this conversation — with spouses, children, parents, and coworkers. And they'll tell you what actually worked.
What matters
Going it alone
With Nephron
Starting the conversation
Dreading the "big talk" and putting it off for months
Members share scripts, timing strategies, and what they wish they'd said sooner
Managing family anxiety
Family oscillates between denial and catastrophizing
Caregivers in the community offer the family perspective — what actually helped them understand
Setting realistic expectations
Family expects either full recovery or immediate crisis
Members model how to explain "stable but chronic" in terms families can hold
Caregiver burnout
Family caregiver has no one to talk to about their own exhaustion
Dedicated caregiver channels where supporters support each other
Children and young family members
No idea how to explain kidney disease to kids
Parents share age-appropriate explanations and how their children adapted
"I was managing my husband's peritoneal dialysis deliveries alone for 8 months. Someone in Nephron sent me a spreadsheet they'd built. I cried for an hour."
Lorraine T.
PD Caregiver · 3 years
"My nephrologist is wonderful but she has 15 minutes with me. The people here have years. Someone answered my 2 AM question about creatinine spikes before I even finished typing."
Marcus J.
Stage 4 CKD · Transplant waitlist
"Post-transplant brain fog is real and nobody warned me. I found three other people here who described it exactly. That alone was worth everything."
Priya N.
Post-transplant · 14 months
"I was Googling 'stage 3 CKD life expectancy' at midnight every other night. Someone here told me to stop — then explained what to actually watch instead. Changed everything."
Robert A.
Stage 3a CKD · Diagnosed 2023
"My family kept saying 'you look fine though.' Nephron was the first place where nobody needed me to explain what fatigue actually feels like. I didn't have to justify anything."
Angela W.
Hemodialysis · 2 years
4,200+
Active members
23+
Diagnosis stages covered
94%
Say they feel less alone
24/7
Someone is always online
We wrote the guide we wish existed when we were newly diagnosed. No jargon. No fear-mongering. Just the things you actually need to know.
Download the New Diagnosis GuideFree. No email required. No strings attached.
The New Diagnosis Guide
By Nephron Community · 2026 Edition
What's inside
What your eGFR number actually means (in plain English)
The 5 questions to ask your nephrologist at every visit
How to talk to your family without overwhelming them
Dialysis modalities explained — no medical degree required
Nutrition basics that won't make you miserable
How to find a transplant center and what the waitlist really looks like
Reviewed by a nephrology team. Written by patients.
4,200+ members are waiting to answer your questions. No judgment. Just people who understand.