Dialysis is crucial for kidney patients. It also generates a lot of waste.
Dialysis is one of the most resource-intensive therapies but patients with kidney failure have no other option, except for a kidney transplant.
Nephrologists are trying to quantify the waste as they advocate for environmentally sustainable kidney care, noting the lifesaving therapy generates hundreds of litres of wastewater at least three times a week per patient, along withvast amounts of carbon emissions and single-use plastic.
WHAT WASTE IS GENERATED BY DIALYSIS?
Kidney care waste includes tubing that carries a patient’s blood, usually from their arm, to a dialysis machine where it is cleaned of toxins. A second tube returns the blood to the body. Plastic jugs, plastic packaging, cardboard and needles are part of the waste. Some biohazard waste containing blood takes more resources to landfill, and patients who do at-home dialysis sometimes have to pay for extra garbage at the curbside.