Many thanks plugger for pointing out to us this most interesting book.
It is very fascinating to observe the development of different ESRF-treatments.
This reminds me of our late IHD-member “Stauffenberg”, who started his dialysis-treatments (whilst he studied/researched in London/England) at the same hospital where my own dialysis-treatments started about 14 years later than his and the great difference of quality in both our treatments is very startling:
Whilst he was constantly sick after each of his treatments three times every week, I was lucky enough to experience the latest dialysis-machines, which, during my time were already much kinder and gentler to the dialysis-needy-body, so that I was lucky enough to be able to keep myself strong enough for my transplant…
Despite the fact that my transplant was extremely difficult for me to take afterwards, due to constant SLE/MCTD-flare-ups starting straight after my transplant etc., which made my life difficult enough ... but I also had to deal with the fact that some nerves “inside” near the new transplant were accidentally harshly “touched” (severed?) during my transplant-operation and therefore my recovery took about three and a half years for me to get a little better, but after all of these terrible upheavals my quality of life has become steadily better, whereas “Stauffenberg” was not given such a chance to eventually get better ... and then his body became too weak for another transplant ... and ... I feel strongly, that because his treatments took place 14 years earlier than mine, it made all the difference and gave me a much better chance than he ever had because science had already moved forward a lot during these 14 years …
Let us hope that very soon scientists find new and hopefully even better ways to make ESRF easier to endure for an ESRF-patient in the future and hopefully there are enough nephrological scientists world-wide in many different countries, all working on clever and newly developed better and different methods and treatments for ESRF-patients, so that hopefully “Blood, Death and Dollars in American Medicine” is not given the total go-ahead world-wide after all? Fingers crossed that new nephrological developments go into a very humanitarian and patient-orientated-direction and I send my best wishes and best of luck in 2023 from Kristina and again, fingers crossed!