8 research outputs found

    Inequities in kidney health and kidney care

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    Acknowledgements The European Kidney Health Alliance (EKHA) is a not-for-profit organization defending the case of the kidney patients and the nephrological community at the level of the European Commission. The EKHA network has five full members (the European Renal Association, the International Society of Nephrology, the European Kidney Patients Federation, the European Dialysis and Transplant Nurses Association-European Renal Care Association and the Dutch Kidney Foundation) next to 27 National or Regional Societies as affiliated members. European Kidney Health Alliance is the recipient of support by the European Union in the context of the Annual Work Program 2022 on prevention of non communicable diseases of EU4Health, topic ID EU4H-2022-PJ02, project #Peer reviewedPostprin

    Japanse encefalitis in Zuid-Europa?

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    In 2012, a fragment of the Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) genome was isolated from a pool of Culex pipiens mosquitoes caught in 2010 and 2011 in Northern Italy. JEV has a broad geographical distribution in South and Southeast Asia and Oceania, and is the most important cause of viral encephalitis in Asia in humans and also causes encephalitis in horses and fertility problems in pigs. However, recently isolated JEV genome fragments in mosquitoes in Italy could be an indication of repeated introduction of JEV, enzootic circulation of JEV or a related virus in Southern Europe. Until more information is available, Japanese encephalitis remains a travel-related infectious disease for travellers to JEV endemic and epidemic areas outside of Europe

    The European Green Deal and nephrology: a call for action by the European Kidney Health Alliance

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    The world faces a dramatic man-made ecologic disaster and healthcare is a crucial part of this problem. Compared with other therapeutic areas, nephrology care, and especially dialysis, creates an excessive burden via water consumption, greenhouse gas emission and waste production. In this advocacy article from the European Kidney Health Alliance we describe the mutual impact of climate change on kidney health and kidney care on ecology. We propose an array of measures as potential solutions related to the prevention of kidney disease, kidney transplantation and green dialysis. For dialysis, several proactive suggestions are made, especially by lowering water consumption, implementing energy-neutral policies, waste triage and recycling of materials. These include original proposals such as dialysate regeneration, dialysate flow reduction, water distillation systems for dialysate production, heat pumps for unit climatization, heat exchangers for dialysate warming, biodegradable and bio-based polymers, alternative power sources, repurposing of plastic waste (e.g. incorporation in concrete), registration systems of ecologic burden and platforms to exchange ecologic best practices. We also discuss how the European Green Deal offers real potential for supporting and galvanizing these urgent environmental changes. Finally, we formulate recommendations to professionals, manufacturers, providers and policymakers on how this correction can be achieved

    Morphology and physiology of the olfactory system of blood-feeding insects

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    Rubber

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