Bloodletting recommended for Jersey residents after PFAS contamination
(theguardian.com)55 points by incognitojam 9 hours ago | 38 comments
55 points by incognitojam 9 hours ago | 38 comments
7 hours ago | root | parent |
greatgib 8 hours ago | prev | next |
The therapy costs about £100,000 upfront and then as much as £200,000 a year to treat 50 people.
Isn't it a little bit expensive just for a blood letting? Basically it should be like a blood donation where you can directly throw the extracted blood. No?etskinner 8 hours ago | root | parent |
Seems to me they might have been saying the cost for the drug therapy rather than the bloodletting
orbisvicis 8 hours ago | prev | next |
Looks like some of their biggest food exports are potatoes and milk (mainly to UK/EU). I wonder if those are also contaminated.
Red_Comet_88 8 hours ago | prev | next |
Synthetic chemistry has overall been a disaster for humanity, particularly since chemists employed the hacker ethos of "move fast and break things". Except in this case the things they broke were other people's bodies and the environment.
Tragic to see the crazed promethean spirit possessing scientists to push forward without a single inkling of the negative consequences. Perhaps Icarus' fate is our inescapable destiny.
linotype 3 hours ago | root | parent | next |
Yeah I can’t think of any practical applications of plastics.
lazide 6 hours ago | root | parent | prev |
Uh, chemists have been doing that since Chemistry was called Alchemy.
ethbr1 8 hours ago | prev | next |
Prompts a couple questions.
Are blood banks testing for levels of PFASs?
How does one test blood for PFASs?
Trasmatta 9 hours ago | prev | next |
It looks like this is for the actual island Jersey, and not New Jersey. I was pretty confused at first. People here on the East Coast call the state "Jersey" as often as we call it "New Jersey". Which is interesting now that I think of it, nobody EVER calls New York just "York".
bookaway 8 hours ago | root | parent | next |
> Which is interesting now that I think of it, nobody EVER calls New York just "York".
I don't know, kind of makes sense to me why that would be the case. Something tells me there are more places that start with "York" as opposed to "Jersey", so there are more chances to cause confusion in the former case.
Trasmatta 8 hours ago | root | parent | next |
I'm more interested in why it never caught on regionally. There would rarely ever be any confusion, nobody in the states would think you were talking about York England. But it still never caught on for whatever reason.
strogonoff 8 hours ago | root | parent | next |
When feasible, spoken English favours double syllable combinations. Three is too many, one is too few for disambiguation in a lossy environment. Hence Jersey, LA, San Fran, Philly, but not York. It’s not a hard rule, of course.
Trasmatta 6 hours ago | root | parent |
Ahh that makes a lot of sense, thank you! It does feel like it's more about the syllables than anything.
> San Fran
Or SF, if you want to avoid making the people that live there mad
detourdog 8 hours ago | root | parent | prev |
I think the regional name for New York is "the city".
Trasmatta 8 hours ago | root | parent | next |
I'm referring more to New York the state, to compare it to its neighboring state New Jersey
johaugum 7 hours ago | root | parent | prev |
“The city” refers to Manhattan specifically, not New York City in general. Being in the other boroughs, you might say “I’m heading to the city later”.
Trasmatta 6 hours ago | root | parent | next |
Or if you're upstate and going to one of the boroughs, you'll generally refer to it by name. "I'm going to Brooklyn / Queens / the Bronx", not "I'm going to the city" or "I'm going to New York City".
detourdog 4 hours ago | root | parent | prev |
I see what you are saying but one could easily go to two or more of those boroughs in single trip.
8 hours ago | root | parent | prev |
fecal_henge 8 hours ago | root | parent | prev |
I am English, assumed this was about New Jersey when reading. Related; title credits of famous tv show set in Jersey.
ajdude 5 hours ago | prev | next |
Reminds me of this:
Regular blood donations can reduce “forever chemicals” in the bloodstream: study https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=31123477
230 points by wirelesspotat on April 22, 2022 | 208 comments
prmph 8 hours ago | prev | next |
> The therapy costs about £100,000 upfront and then as much as £200,000 a year to treat 50 people.
Interesting that the bloodletting is so expensive. I wonder what makes it so?
etskinner 8 hours ago | root | parent |
For anyone who also thought that was a weird way to say the stat, it's £2,000 upfront and £4,000 a year for one person.
It does seem awfully high. Donating blood costs way less. Maybe the treatment they're saying the cost for is the drug rather than the bloodletting?
woleium 7 hours ago | root | parent |
i assume they get a transfusion as well?
r0ckarong 9 hours ago | prev | next |
Leeches, come get your leeches.
koolba 8 hours ago | root | parent | next |
Pretty much. Though looks like it actually works: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8994130/
ethbr1 8 hours ago | root | parent |
Dilution is the solution!
koolba 2 hours ago | root | parent | next |
The only solution to pollution is dilution.
lazide 6 hours ago | root | parent | prev |
Aka changing the oil.
LinuxBender 8 hours ago | root | parent | prev |
Also fight club. Burns calories too.
semking 8 hours ago | prev | next |
I simply cannot believe what I'm reading... :(
pfdietz 8 hours ago | prev | next |
All this concern about PFAs is reminding me of artificial blood made with perfluorinated chemicals. It would have utterly enormous quantities of the chemicals, circulating as a microemulsion throughout the body.
woleium 7 hours ago | root | parent |
And you just know there are probably a bunch of ex military privates (who are probably currently being denied care) who were just drenched in the stuff to see if they could run harder faster stronger :’(
lazide 6 hours ago | root | parent |
‘Your condition is not service related’
Though a bunch did start getting treated for when they got doused in PFAS fire retardants.
OutOfHere 6 hours ago | prev | next |
Cholestyramine is a bile binder, and while it can help with some PFAS, it won't be as effective as blood removal. For most of us, the solution is regular blood donations and Organic psyllium husk powder which too is a bile binder.
aaron695 8 hours ago | prev | next |
[dead]
8 hours ago | prev |
blindriver 8 hours ago | next |
The idea that the government settled with 3M for 2.6M is unconscionable and needs to be investigated. The paltry sum reeks of bribery and corruption.