If you ever wonder why all the work you do to encourage contributions to kidney disease research never leads to a cure, a large part of it is because of the money collected being spent on studies like this! You might as well conduct a survey to find out how people feel when you hit them on the head with a hammer!If you go to a medical library and look through the latest issues of a dozen different nephrology journals, you will find hundreds of scientific articles fretting and fussing over the relationship between potassium levels and fingernail growth in dialysis patients on PD vs. hemodialysis, but next to no studies on any topic which could possibly lead to a cure. Research money contributed to kidney disease is mainly used to entertain science nerds who like to play in their laboratories and get a good salary at the same time, but not to cure disease or make the condition of the patients any better.
I just did the survey and am ready for a nap! My eyes kept glazing over, reading the same questions, just worded slightly different, over and over again. I hope it's useful!
I agree with MattyBoy100.I just completed the survey. No big deal. And in the survey's introduction, it is explained that, "Some of the questions will seem to be the same but are asked in slightly different ways. In order for us to know which version of a question is best, it is important that you try to answer all of the questions."So, lets all lighten up a bit.
Research money contributed to kidney disease is mainly used to entertain science nerds who like to play in their laboratories and get a good salary at the same time, but not to cure disease or make the condition of the patients any better.
But just contrast the degree of progress in nephrology with the degree of progress over exactly the same time period with another science, such as computers or rocket science. The U.S. Army was just working on its massive, room-filling computer to calculate artillery ranges when Kolff invented his dialysis machine, while the Germans were just test-firing the prototypic V-2 rockets at Peenemunde. But today, while we are still stuck with dialysis in nephrology, computer technology has changed radically since 1942, just as rocketry has taken us to the Moon and back (almost 30 years ago!), and could take us to Mars and back now. Measured by other sciences, nephrology is just not keeping pace.