Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5685954 | Journal of Renal Nutrition | 2017 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
In our high-technology, highly polluted world, medicine plays an important role balancing saving lives with the expenses of growing amounts of waste products, not only biologically dangerous (the potentially “contaminated” or “hazardous” waste) but also potentially harmful for the planet (nonrecyclable, plastic waste). Dialysis, the prototype of high-technology medicine, is central to these problems, as the present treatment of about 2Â million patients produces an enormous quantity of waste (considering hazardous waste only about 2Â kg per session, with 160 sessions per year, that is 320Â kg per patient, or about 640,000 tons of hazardous waste per year for 2 million patients, roughly corresponding to 6 nuclear aircraft carriers). Furthermore, obsolete dialysis machines, and water treatments are discharged, adding to the “technological waste.” Water produced by the reverse osmosis is also discharged; this is the only nonhazardous, nonpolluting waste, but in particular in dry areas, wasting water is a great ecologic concern. The present review is aimed at discussing strategies already in place and to be further implemented for reducing this particular “uremic toxin” for the earth: dialysis waste, including dialysis disposables, water, and dialysis machines.
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Authors
Giorgina Barbara MD, David Mery,