156 sessions. ~624 hours of sitting still in a cold room with one or both arms exposed. Most dialysis comfort advice tells you what to buy. It does not tell you how to wear it for an entire year. This is the rotation that does.
The rotation that holds up across a year of treatment is four pieces: one thick fleece-lined access hoodie, one mid-weight access hoodie, one easy-access tee for warmer rooms, and one pair of soft pull-on pants. Two thick hoodies plus the lighter layer means one is always clean while one is on you and one is in transit. Below: why this combination, what each piece earns, and how to flex it through the year.
Three sessions a week. Five hours each. 52 weeks a year. The wardrobe that works isn’t beautiful — it’s strategic. You need port or fistula access without showing it, warmth for cold infusion rooms, fabric that survives 156 wash cycles a year, and pieces you can put on tired without thinking. Below: the 5-piece rotation that real long-term dialysis patients land on.
The numbers that shape the wardrobe
The cold is the part new patients are least prepared for. The National Kidney Foundation’s guidance notes that hemodialysis cools the blood as it cycles through the machine, so even people who normally “run warm” feel cold within an hour. Kidney Care UK echoes this with a layering recommendation specifically for fistula and graft patients.
— National Kidney Foundation, How to Dress for Dialysis Access
The four pieces that anchor the rotation
1. The thick, fleece-lined access hoodie
Two-way zips along both arms, thumb holes, kangaroo pocket. The fleece lining is what replaces the borrowed clinic blanket — it holds heat for the full session without needing the air-warmer to be on max. We make a version called The Session Hoodie; the design pattern (two-way arm access + thumb holes + deep pocket) is the same set of features you should look for in any brand.
2. A mid-weight access hoodie
Same arm-access design, lighter fabric. Carries the weight of April–May and September–October when the clinic AC fights an unseasonably warm day. Several creators in our affiliate program (@dialysisbarbie, @dialysisanddiamonds) alternate the thick and mid-weight versions through their feeds — a useful real-world reference for what each one looks like in session.
3. An easy-access tee
A snap-shoulder or short-sleeve top that takes the hoodie’s job in July. Not as warm; not as needed in mid-July. Single-sided access is fine if you have a one-arm fistula; double-sided if access alternates.
4. A pair of soft pull-on pants
Not adaptive — just genuinely comfortable. Something to sleep in if you doze off. No hard waistband. The pants part of the rotation barely changes by season; one good pair, two if you want a backup.
How the rotation actually works across a week
The rule that holds up: at any moment, one piece is on you, one is in the wash, and one is in the bag for tomorrow.
| Day | On you | In the wash | Ready for next |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mon (session) | Thick hoodie A | — | Thick hoodie B + tee |
| Tuesday | — | Hoodie A | Hoodie B |
| Wed (session) | Thick hoodie B | Hoodie A drying | Tee + clean A by Thu |
| Thursday | — | Hoodie B | Hoodie A back in service |
| Fri (session) | Thick hoodie A | — | Either hoodie + tee |
Two thick hoodies plus a tee gets you through a normal week. If you’re on a Tue/Thu/Sat schedule, the same logic shifts by a day. If you’re home-hemo or on peritoneal dialysis, the wash load drops because pieces stay cleaner — see further down.
What changes by season
| Season | Primary piece | Backup | Add-on |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nov–Mar | Thick fleece hoodie | Second thick hoodie | Thin merino base layer |
| Apr–May / Sep–Oct | Mid-weight hoodie | Thick hoodie for cold mornings | — |
| Jun–Aug | Easy-access tee | Mid-weight hoodie for AC | — |
Watch: 60 seconds on what makes a dialysis hoodie work
Shanzay walks through the access zips, the thumb holes, and the pocket on The Session Hoodie. If you have not seen what two-way arm access looks like in motion, this is the cleanest demo we have.
[ Embed: Drive video file 1gyjjxh1q6srGWOXnzNeor5mpjVXQiTKk ]
Home hemodialysis and PD: the rotation looks different
If you’re doing dialysis at home, two things change. First, the room is yours — you control the thermostat. The thick hoodie does not have to be quite as thick. Second, the wash load drops because pieces aren’t on a public chair. Home Dialysis Central’s clothing resources page is the cleanest collection of options for home-hemo specifically.
Peritoneal dialysis (PD) is its own situation. The catheter exits at the abdomen, so the wardrobe rules invert: tops do not need access; bottoms do. The NKF’s PD overview covers the basics; a separate piece on this site walks through which waistbands work with a PD catheter and which fight the exit site.
What we hear most from customers
— recurring sentiment from customer feedback
The pattern customers describe most often: getting a second of the same hoodie was the unlock. Before that, the days when the hoodie was in the wash meant a borrowed clinic blanket and a worse mood for the first hour. After that, every session started warm.
The four-piece rotation, from our store
The four pieces above live across two collections. The Session Hoodie collection covers the thick and mid-weight hoodies; the broader Dialysis collection includes the access tees and the soft pants. If you’d rather start as a kit, the Dialysis Weekly Reset bundles two hoodies and a pair of pants together with a session-day guide.
Frequently asked questions
How many hoodies do I really need?
Two thick + one mid-weight + one tee is the rotation that holds up. If your laundry runs once a week instead of twice, three thick hoodies is more honest. If you’re home-hemo and control the thermostat, two pieces total is often enough.
Are dialysis hoodies machine washable?
The fleece-lined ones we make are machine wash cold, tumble dry low. Two-way zips need to be fully closed before the wash to keep the slider from snagging. Always read the tag — fabric blends vary by brand.
What about my fistula in cold weather outside the clinic?
The fistula side stays warm under whatever you’d normally wear. A thumb-hole sleeve does double duty — it covers the hand and traps heat over the access. Avoid anything tight that sits directly over the bruit (the buzz you feel over the fistula). Kidney Care UK’s cold-weather guidance is the cleanest write-up.
Can I wear my normal clothes to dialysis?
Yes — many people do. The questions: can your nurse access the fistula or graft without you having to undress, and will you be warm enough for four hours sitting still? If both answers are yes for the shirt you’re looking at, you don’t need recovery wear. If either is no, the rotation above is the cheapest fix.
What about peritoneal dialysis tops?
PD doesn’t need access tops because the catheter exits at the abdomen. The bottoms are the bigger consideration — soft, pull-on, no hard waistband at the exit site.
Sources and further reading
- National Kidney Foundation — How to Dress for Dialysis Access
- National Kidney Foundation — Hemodialysis A to Z
- National Kidney Foundation — Peritoneal Dialysis basics
- Kidney Care UK — Accessible Clothing for Dialysis
- Home Dialysis Central — Clothing products
Frequently Asked Questions
Sources
- National Kidney Foundation — kidney.org
- American Kidney Fund — kidneyfund.org
- U.S. Renal Data System — usrds.org
- Home Dialyzors United — homedialyzorsunited.org
From the Inspired Comforts collection.
Continue reading
- Why dialysis rooms are so cold (and the layer that finally helped)
- AV fistula vs graft vs catheter: a dressing guide for each access type
- “I’ve sat in 487 dialysis chairs.” A patient’s wardrobe lessons learned the hard way.








