
Orlando Bloom tried to ‘clean' his blood to get rid of microplastics – here's what the science says
When actor Orlando Bloom revealed in June 2025, that he'd undergone a procedure to have his blood 'cleaned', many people raised eyebrows. The Pirates of the Caribbean star had turned to a treatment known as apheresis – a medical process in which blood is removed from the body, centrifuged or filtered to extract certain components, then returned in an attempt to flush out microplastics and other toxins.
Apheresis is typically used to treat conditions such as autoimmune diseases or abnormally high levels of blood cells or proteins. Its use as a detox for microplastics, however, is scientifically unproven.
Still, Bloom said he suspected his body had absorbed plastic through daily exposure, and wanted it out of his system.
He's probably right about the exposure. Scientists have found microplastics – tiny plastic fragments less than 5mm in size – in our air, water, soil, food and even inside human tissue. But when it comes to removing them from the bloodstream, that's where the science gets murky.
As researchers studying microplastic contamination, we've examined this issue in the context of dialysis – a life-saving treatment for patients with kidney failure. Dialysis filters waste products like urea and creatinine from the blood, regulates electrolytes, removes excess fluid and helps maintain blood pressure.
But our study found that while dialysis is a medical marvel, it can also have an ironic downside: it could be introducing microplastics into the bloodstream. In some cases, we found that patients undergoing dialysis were being exposed to microplastics during treatment due to the breakdown of plastic components in the equipment – a troubling contradiction for a procedure designed to cleanse the blood.
Apheresis is closely related to dialysis: both involve drawing blood from the body, circulating it through plastic tubing and filters, then returning it – so both procedures carry a similar risk of introducing microplastics from the equipment into the bloodstream.
What are microplastics?
Microplastics are plastic particles that range in size from about 5mm (roughly the length of a grain of rice) down to 0.1 microns – smaller than a red blood cell.
Some microplastics are manufactured deliberately, like the plastic microbeads once common in facial scrubs. Others form when larger plastic objects degrade over time due to sunlight, friction, or physical stress.
They're everywhere: in the food we eat, the air we breathe and the water we drink. Plastic packaging, synthetic clothing such as polyester, and even artificial lawns contribute to the spread. Car tyres shed plastic particles as they wear down, and food heated or stored in plastic containers may leach microplastics.
One estimate suggests the average adult may ingest around 883 microplastic particles – over half a microgramme – per day.
So far, large-scale epidemiological studies have not established an association between microplastic exposure and specific diseases. Such studies are needed, but yet to be completed.
However, early research suggests that microplastics may be associated with inflammation, cardiovascular conditions, and DNA damage – a potential pathway to cancer.
What remains unclear is how microplastics behave inside the body: whether they accumulate, how they interact with tissues, and how (or if) the body clears them.
The irony of filtration
It's tempting to believe, as Bloom seems to, that we can simply 'clean' the blood, like draining pasta or purifying drinking water. Just as a sieve filters water from pasta, dialysis machines do filter blood – but using far more complex and delicate systems.
These machines rely on plastic components, including tubes, membranes and filters, which are exposed to sustained pressure and repeated use. Unlike stainless steel, these materials can degrade over time, potentially shedding microplastics directly into the bloodstream.
Currently, there is no published scientific evidence that microplastics can be effectively filtered from human blood. So, claims that dialysis or other treatments can remove them should be viewed with scepticism, especially when the filtration systems themselves are made of plastic.
While it's tempting to chase quick fixes or celebrity-endorsed cleanses, we are still in the early stages of understanding what microplastics are doing to our bodies – and how to get rid of them. Rather than focusing solely on ways to flush plastics from the bloodstream, the more effective long-term strategy may be reducing our exposure in the first place.
Bloom's story taps into a growing public unease: we all know we're carrying the burden of plastic. But addressing it requires more than wellness trends: it calls for rigorous science, tougher regulation, and a shift away from our reliance on plastic in daily life. DM

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The Gauteng Department of Health (GDoH) has come under fire following revelations that the province's public hospitals have only 751 ICU nurses, less than half of the 1,760 needed to adequately serve its population. The crisis was laid bare in a written response by Gauteng Health MEC Nomantu Nkomo-Ralehoko to the Democratic Alliance (DA) inquiry in the Provincial Legislature, where she confirmed the province is operating with less than half the ICU nurses it needs. This is according to the DA Gauteng Shadow MEC for Health, Jack Bloom. Bloom said Nkomo-Ralehoko raised alarm over the ICU nurse shortage, citing increased patient deaths, delayed surgeries, and staff burnout. He added that the crisis is driving experienced nurses away and deterring new ones, putting patient safety at serious risk. "Increased patient mortality, decreased quality of care, increased workload and burnout, delayed or cancelled procedures/surgeries, increased length of stay, negative patient experience of care, increased healthcare costs from overtime and temporary staffing, persistent shortages can discourage potential nurses from pursuing ICU careers and lead to experienced lCU nurses leaving the profession, and insufficient staffing can undermine patient safety initiatives, such as infection prevention and control and medication safety programmes." He further revealed that, ideally, Gauteng should have between 1 600 and 3 200 ICU beds for its 16 million residents, based on the guideline of 10 to 20 ICU beds per 100 000 people, meaning the province would need 1 760 to 3 520 ICU nurses to properly staff them. Bloom also expressed concern over the 250 unfilled ICU nurse vacancies. "I am concerned that there are 250 ICU nurse vacancies, which means that one in four ICU nurse positions are unfilled despite the vast need. The MEC blames 'budget constraints and few Speciality Nurses in ICU.'" He reiterated that the lack of ICU nurses is a major reason why many operations are cancelled, as emergency cases take precedence. He added that it also contributes to long waiting times for surgeries, with more than 34,000 people on the waiting lists.' IOL previously reported that South Africa is grappling with a critical shortage of ICU beds in the public health sector, with an average of just five beds per 100,000 people. In some provinces, the situation is even more dire, with as few as one ICU bed available per 100 000 residents. This information comes from Professor Fathima Paruk, head of Critical Care Services and Emergency Medicine at the University of Pretoria's Faculty of Health Sciences, reiterating Bloom's guideline. She presented these alarming statistics during her inaugural address, titled 'Carpe Diem: Achieving Efficient and Fair Allocation of Critical Care Across South Africa.' Paruk described the shortage of ICU beds in the country as a complex and multifaceted challenge. 'Hospitals are going to need more and more ICU beds because patients are living longer. ICU can save lives, and when patients live longer, they have more comorbidities, so they end up getting sick more often.' In 2022, the GDoH faced a similar challenge and took steps to address the shortage of ICU nurses by prioritising the filling of vacant nursing posts to help close the province's critical skills gap. At the time, the GDoH reported having approximately 659 ICU nurses and said it was working to increase this number by also utilising the 317 vacant Professional Nurse Grade 1 posts to strengthen ICU capacity and other critical specialities. The Star reached out to the Gauteng Department of Health for comment regarding the alleged shortage of ICU nurses, but no response had been received by the time of publication. The Star [email protected]

IOL News
18 hours ago
- IOL News
Gauteng public hospitals face critical shortage of ICU nurses
South Africa is facing a critical shortage of ICU beds and skilled staff to man those units The Gauteng Department of Health (GDoH) has come under fire following revelations that the province's public hospitals have only 751 ICU nurses, less than half of the 1,760 needed to adequately serve its population. The crisis was laid bare in a written response by Gauteng Health MEC Nomantu Nkomo-Ralehoko to the Democratic Alliance (DA) inquiry in the Provincial Legislature, where she confirmed the province is operating with less than half the ICU nurses it needs. This is according to the DA Gauteng Shadow MEC for Health, Jack Bloom. Bloom said Nkomo-Ralehoko raised alarm over the ICU nurse shortage, citing increased patient deaths, delayed surgeries, and staff burnout. He added that the crisis is driving experienced nurses away and deterring new ones, putting patient safety at serious risk. "Increased patient mortality, decreased quality of care, increased workload and burnout, delayed or cancelled procedures/surgeries, increased length of stay, negative patient experience of care, increased healthcare costs from overtime and temporary staffing, persistent shortages can discourage potential nurses from pursuing ICU careers and lead to experienced lCU nurses leaving the profession, and insufficient staffing can undermine patient safety initiatives, such as infection prevention and control and medication safety programmes." He further revealed that, ideally, Gauteng should have between 1 600 and 3 200 ICU beds for its 16 million residents, based on the guideline of 10 to 20 ICU beds per 100 000 people, meaning the province would need 1 760 to 3 520 ICU nurses to properly staff them. Bloom also expressed concern over the 250 unfilled ICU nurse vacancies. "I am concerned that there are 250 ICU nurse vacancies, which means that one in four ICU nurse positions are unfilled despite the vast need. The MEC blames 'budget constraints and few Speciality Nurses in ICU.'" He reiterated that the lack of ICU nurses is a major reason why many operations are cancelled, as emergency cases take precedence. He added that it also contributes to long waiting times for surgeries, with more than 34,000 people on the waiting lists.' IOL previously reported that South Africa is grappling with a critical shortage of ICU beds in the public health sector, with an average of just five beds per 100,000 people. In some provinces, the situation is even more dire, with as few as one ICU bed available per 100 000 residents. This information comes from Professor Fathima Paruk, head of Critical Care Services and Emergency Medicine at the University of Pretoria's Faculty of Health Sciences, reiterating Bloom's guideline. She presented these alarming statistics during her inaugural address, titled 'Carpe Diem: Achieving Efficient and Fair Allocation of Critical Care Across South Africa.' Paruk described the shortage of ICU beds in the country as a complex and multifaceted challenge. 'Hospitals are going to need more and more ICU beds because patients are living longer. ICU can save lives, and when patients live longer, they have more comorbidities, so they end up getting sick more often.' In 2022, the GDoH faced a similar challenge and took steps to address the shortage of ICU nurses by prioritising the filling of vacant nursing posts to help close the province's critical skills gap. At the time, the GDoH reported having approximately 659 ICU nurses and said it was working to increase this number by also utilising the 317 vacant Professional Nurse Grade 1 posts to strengthen ICU capacity and other critical specialities. The Star reached out to the Gauteng Department of Health for comment regarding the alleged shortage of ICU nurses, but no response had been received by the time of publication. The Star


Daily Maverick
3 days ago
- Daily Maverick
Orlando Bloom tried to ‘clean' his blood to get rid of microplastics – here's what the science says
Microplastics in your blood? Orlando Bloom thinks so. Here's what the science says about detox, dialysis and whether 'cleaning' your blood really works. When actor Orlando Bloom revealed in June 2025, that he'd undergone a procedure to have his blood 'cleaned', many people raised eyebrows. The Pirates of the Caribbean star had turned to a treatment known as apheresis – a medical process in which blood is removed from the body, centrifuged or filtered to extract certain components, then returned in an attempt to flush out microplastics and other toxins. Apheresis is typically used to treat conditions such as autoimmune diseases or abnormally high levels of blood cells or proteins. Its use as a detox for microplastics, however, is scientifically unproven. Still, Bloom said he suspected his body had absorbed plastic through daily exposure, and wanted it out of his system. He's probably right about the exposure. Scientists have found microplastics – tiny plastic fragments less than 5mm in size – in our air, water, soil, food and even inside human tissue. But when it comes to removing them from the bloodstream, that's where the science gets murky. As researchers studying microplastic contamination, we've examined this issue in the context of dialysis – a life-saving treatment for patients with kidney failure. Dialysis filters waste products like urea and creatinine from the blood, regulates electrolytes, removes excess fluid and helps maintain blood pressure. But our study found that while dialysis is a medical marvel, it can also have an ironic downside: it could be introducing microplastics into the bloodstream. In some cases, we found that patients undergoing dialysis were being exposed to microplastics during treatment due to the breakdown of plastic components in the equipment – a troubling contradiction for a procedure designed to cleanse the blood. Apheresis is closely related to dialysis: both involve drawing blood from the body, circulating it through plastic tubing and filters, then returning it – so both procedures carry a similar risk of introducing microplastics from the equipment into the bloodstream. What are microplastics? Microplastics are plastic particles that range in size from about 5mm (roughly the length of a grain of rice) down to 0.1 microns – smaller than a red blood cell. Some microplastics are manufactured deliberately, like the plastic microbeads once common in facial scrubs. Others form when larger plastic objects degrade over time due to sunlight, friction, or physical stress. They're everywhere: in the food we eat, the air we breathe and the water we drink. Plastic packaging, synthetic clothing such as polyester, and even artificial lawns contribute to the spread. Car tyres shed plastic particles as they wear down, and food heated or stored in plastic containers may leach microplastics. One estimate suggests the average adult may ingest around 883 microplastic particles – over half a microgramme – per day. So far, large-scale epidemiological studies have not established an association between microplastic exposure and specific diseases. Such studies are needed, but yet to be completed. However, early research suggests that microplastics may be associated with inflammation, cardiovascular conditions, and DNA damage – a potential pathway to cancer. What remains unclear is how microplastics behave inside the body: whether they accumulate, how they interact with tissues, and how (or if) the body clears them. The irony of filtration It's tempting to believe, as Bloom seems to, that we can simply 'clean' the blood, like draining pasta or purifying drinking water. Just as a sieve filters water from pasta, dialysis machines do filter blood – but using far more complex and delicate systems. These machines rely on plastic components, including tubes, membranes and filters, which are exposed to sustained pressure and repeated use. Unlike stainless steel, these materials can degrade over time, potentially shedding microplastics directly into the bloodstream. Currently, there is no published scientific evidence that microplastics can be effectively filtered from human blood. So, claims that dialysis or other treatments can remove them should be viewed with scepticism, especially when the filtration systems themselves are made of plastic. While it's tempting to chase quick fixes or celebrity-endorsed cleanses, we are still in the early stages of understanding what microplastics are doing to our bodies – and how to get rid of them. Rather than focusing solely on ways to flush plastics from the bloodstream, the more effective long-term strategy may be reducing our exposure in the first place. Bloom's story taps into a growing public unease: we all know we're carrying the burden of plastic. But addressing it requires more than wellness trends: it calls for rigorous science, tougher regulation, and a shift away from our reliance on plastic in daily life. DM