I've been reading renal related abstracts like this for years now, and I have often suspected that there are too many people out there who are in intense competitions to be published. Elsevier seems to publish anything and everything.And then I read thishttp://www.economist.com/news/briefing/21588057-scientists-think-science-self-correcting-alarming-degree-it-not-troublewhich pretty much confirmed my suspicions.This particular abstract does not make sense to me in that it doesn't tell us anything we don't already know. A fistula usually takes longer to become "operational" than a graft whether or not you have a catheter. Now, if the authors are saying that the reason a graft might be better for a patient with a catheter is only because it may mean that the catheter can be removed sooner, thereby reducing the risk of infection, that's fair enough, but the authors are not saying that, are they.Yes, the risk of non-maturation is higher in fistulas, but both patient and doctor need to weigh the pros and cons.Everyone on dialysis knows that vascular access is the biggest bugbear. The human body is not designed for it to be easy to access the blood system so often for so prolonged a period.