I was lucky enough to meet Dr Scribner and his wife Ethel, visiting them on their house boat several times. The first time I met him he said hello and then asked if he could take my blood pressure. Uh oh, pop quiz. I was lucky that day 120s over 70s. Lucky because I knew Scribner looked to blood pressure control as the surest sign of adequate dialysis. Adequate dialysis.
To this day I use the Scribner Hemodialysis Product to reckon how a change in schedule will impact the dose of dialysis I am receiving. Scribner is a personal hero of mine. Not only did he come up with a way to access the blood again and again over time he gave that idea to the world. There is no patent on the Scribner shunt. Scribner’s egalitarian vision didn’t stop there he also conspired with others e.g. James Haviland to build a community based non-profit organization to provide the dialysis.
This organization was the Seattle Artificial Kidney Center, today’s Northwest Kidney Centers. You can read our history here:
http://www.nwkidney.org/about/history/index.html NKC has had a pioneering role in the history of dialysis. This is our 45th year.
Full disclosure: I say our because I serve on the NKC Board of Trustees and have a personal sense of pride of ownership.