There is no way I would wear this thing in public! It's way too big and clunky, would make doing most things difficult, and has absolutely no fashion sense. I don't see any practcality in it. How would you drive? Bathe? Pick up anything? Hug others? Can you imagine wearing that thing on a hot day? Or on vacation in an amusement park? Getting on a plane? OMG, what will the TSA think??? Hopefully, the final product will be a lot more user friendly. This to me just seems way too cumbersome to deal with.KarenInWA
The project at UCSF is working on an IMPLANTABLE artificial kidney, so have a look at it and follow the link I posted above. Here is another link that gives much better information:http://www.ucsf.edu/news/2010/09/4450/ucsf-unveils-model-implantable-artificial-kidney-replace-dialysisSince the device would be implantable, there would be nothing to "wear" externally. The problem is size, but it looks like it is only a matter of time before that problem is solved because what will be used is actual kidney cells to build the biofilter. This project is probably a few years behind the wearable artificial kidney, but it has been fasttracked by the FDA, so the wait time might be decreased by a fair margin.I think we've all felt that dialysis as practiced today is just too burdensome and expensive to maintain. Miniaturization has occurred in so many different technologies...remember how big cellphones used to be? Necessity is the mother of invention, and we need more cost efficient ways to deliver dialysis, not to mention just more compassionate ways!This is all very exciting stuff!