Where are the Dialysis Patients?

A family member told me that he recently saw a nephrologist. The kidney doctor goes to several dialysis centers in Western New York. He said to him that they are only open three days a week now. They don’t know why.

Previously, they had to open the 32-bed dialysis center six days a week, from 4 am to 10 pm. Each patient needs 4 hours of dialysis three times a week on average. Four patients will use a dialysis bed in a day. 32 x 4 equals 128 dialysis patients. That’s 128 patients gone. It is unlikely that they all had kidney transplants.

Granted that dialysis patients get sick and die like any other patient, there is usually a group of patients with chronic kidney disease that will need dialysis and replace them.  Where are they?

This little anecdote is a bit shocking to me. These two groups of patients (dialysis and pre-dialysis patients) are gone, yet no one in the medical field involved with them knows why?

Is it the vaccines?

 

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