Doctors, patients want options to reduce dialysis waste adding to climate change
VANCOUVER — Francis Silva watches the blood flow through astraw-like tube in his left arm to a dialysis machine where it’s cleaned of toxins and returned to his body through a second tube.
The 60-year-old chef endures the four-hour process every Tuesday, Thursday and Sundayat St. Paul’s Hospital where a 42-bed unit is dedicated to lifesaving hemodialysis but is also the source of a significant amount of medical waste that a group of nephrologists wants to curb across the country.
“Last year when I had a heart operation, it just got worse,” Silvasaid of his kidney problems, for which he tried to find a bright side. “I need the rest. I’ve been standing for eight hours.”
Down the hall, carts are loaded with blue plastic bins full of dialysis supplies that include plastic tubing in plastic and paper packaging. A supply room contains plastic jugs of solution that will be mixed with purified water and piped into the dialysis machines lined up against a wall.