428 results on '"Kumaraswami, Latha"'
Search Results
2. Saúde dos rins para todos: preenchendo a lacuna de educação e conhecimento sobre a saúde renal
- Author
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Langham, Robyn G, Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, Bonner, Ann, Balducci, Alessandro, Hsiao, Li-Li, Kumaraswami, Latha A, Laffin, Paul, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Saadi, Gamal, Tantisattamo, Ekamol, Ulasi, Ifeoma, and Lui, Siu-Fai
- Abstract
Resumo A elevada carga da doença renal, disparidades globais no cuidado renal e desfechos ruins da insuficiência renal impõem uma sobrecarga crescente aos indivíduos afetados e suas famílias, cuidadores e a própria comunidade geral. Educação em saúde é o grau em que indivíduos e organizações têm, ou que igualmente permitem que indivíduos tenham, capacidade de encontrar, compreender e utilizar informações e serviços para tomar decisões e ações conscientes relacionadas à saúde para si e outros. Mais do que enxergar educação em saúde como um problema dos pacientes, a melhoria dessa educação depende principalmente da comunicação e educação efetiva dos profissionais em parceria com aqueles que apresentam doença renal. Para formuladores de políticas renais, educação em saúde é pré-requisito para que organizações migrem para uma cultura que coloque a pessoa no centro dos cuidados. A crescente capacidade e acesso à tecnologia oferecem novas oportunidades para melhorar educação e conscientização sobre doença renal para todas as partes interessadas. Avanços nas telecomunicações, incluindo redes sociais, podem ajudar a melhorar a educação de pessoas e provedores. O Dia Mundial do Rim declara 2022 como o ano da "Saúde dos Rins para Todos" promovendo trabalho em equipe global no avanço de estratégias para preencher a lacuna na educação e conhecimento em saúde renal. Organizações renais devem trabalhar para mudar a narrativa da educação em saúde como um problema de pacientes, para sendo responsabilidade dos profissionais e formuladores de políticas. Ao engajar-se e apoiar formulação de políticas centradas na saúde renal, planejamento de saúde comunitária e abordagens de educação em saúde para todos, comunidades renais esforçam-se para prevenir doenças renais e permitir viver bem com elas.
- Published
- 2023
3. Kidney health for all: Bridging the gap in kidney health education and literacy
- Author
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Langham, Robyn G, Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, Bonner, Ann, Balducci, Alessandro, Hsiao, Li-Li, Kumaraswami, Latha A, Laffin, Paul, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Saadi, Gamal, Tantisattamo, Ekamol, Ulasi, Ifeoma, and Lui, Siu-Fai
- Published
- 2022
4. Patient-centred approaches for the management of unpleasant symptoms in kidney disease.
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Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, Lockwood, Mark B, Rhee, Connie M, Tantisattamo, Ekamol, Andreoli, Sharon, Balducci, Alessandro, Laffin, Paul, Harris, Tess, Knight, Richard, Kumaraswami, Latha, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Lui, Siu-Fai, Kumar, Sajay, Ng, Maggie, Saadi, Gamal, Ulasi, Ifeoma, Tong, Allison, and Li, Philip Kam-Tao
- Subjects
Humans ,Uremia ,Fatigue ,Renal Dialysis ,Quality of Life ,Renal Insufficiency ,Chronic ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Digestive Diseases ,Clinical Research ,Neurosciences ,Kidney Disease ,Pain Research ,Chronic Pain ,Renal and urogenital ,Good Health and Well Being ,Clinical Sciences ,Urology & Nephrology - Abstract
Patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) frequently experience unpleasant symptoms. These can be gastrointestinal (constipation, nausea, vomiting and diarrhoea), psychological (anxiety and sadness), neurological (lightheadedness, headache and numbness), cardiopulmonary (shortness of breath and oedema), dermatological (pruritus and dry skin), painful (muscle cramps, chest pain and abdominal pain) or involve sexual dysfunction, sleep disorders and fatigue. These symptoms often occur in clusters, with one of them as the lead symptom and others as secondary symptoms. Uraemic toxins (also called uremic toxins) are often considered to be the main cause of CKD-associated symptom burden, but treatment of uraemia by dialysis often fails to resolve them and can engender additional symptoms. Indeed, symptoms can be exacerbated by comorbid conditions, pharmacotherapies, lifestyle and dietary regimens, kidney replacement therapy and ageing. Patients with kidney disease, including those who depend on dialysis or transplantation, should feel actively supported in their symptom management through the identification and targeting of unpleasant symptoms via a tailored palliative care approach. Such an approach may help minimize the burden and consequences of kidney disease, and lead to improved patient outcomes including health-related quality of life and better life participation.
- Published
- 2022
5. Living well with kidney disease by patient and care-partner empowerment: Kidney health for everyone everywhere.
- Author
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Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, Li, Philip Kam-Tao, Tantisattamo, Ekamol, Kumaraswami, Latha, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Lui, Siu-Fai, Ulasi, Ifeoma, Andreoli, Sharon, Balducci, Alessandro, Dupuis, Sophie, Harris, Tess, Hradsky, Anne, Knight, Richard, Kumar, Sajay, Ng, Maggie, Poidevin, Alice, Saadi, Gamal, Tong, Allison, and World Kidney Day Steering Committee
- Subjects
World Kidney Day Steering Committee ,Kidney ,Humans ,Kidney Diseases ,Health Services Accessibility ,Empowerment ,Care-partner ,Health policy ,Low-middle-income countries ,Patient empowerment ,Good Health and Well Being ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Public Health - Abstract
Living with chronic kidney disease is associated with hardships for patients and their carepartners. Empowering patients and their care-partners, including family members or friends involved in their care, may help minimize the burden and consequences of CKD related symptoms to enable life participation. There is a need to broaden the focus on living well with kidney disease and re-engagement in life, including an emphasis on patients being in control. The World Kidney Day Joint Steering Committee has declared 2021 the year of “Living Well with Kidney Disease” to increase education and awareness on the important goal of patient empowerment and life participation. This calls for the development and implementation of validated patient-reported outcome measures to assess and address areas of life participation in routine care. It could be supported by regulatory agencies as a metric for quality care or to support labelling claims for medicines and devices. Funding agencies could establish targeted calls for research that address the priorities of patients. Patients with kidney disease and their care-partners should feel supported to live well through concerted efforts by kidney care communities including during pandemics. In the overall wellness program for kidney disease patients, the need for prevention should be reiterated. Early detection with a prolonged course of wellness despite kidney disease, after effective secondary and tertiary prevention programs, should be promoted. World Kidney Day 2021 continues to call for increased awareness of the importance of preventive measures throughout populations, professionals, and policy makers, applicable to both developed and developing countries.
- Published
- 2022
6. Living Well With Kidney Disease by Patient and Care Partner Empowerment: Kidney Health for Everyone Everywhere
- Author
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Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, Li, Philip Kam-Tao, Tantisattamo, Ekamol, Kumaraswami, Latha, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Lui, Siu-Fai, Ulasi, Ifeoma, Andreoli, Sharon, Balducci, Alessandro, Dupuis, Sophie, Harris, Tess, Hradsky, Anne, Knight, Richard, Kumar, Sajay, Ng, Maggie, Poidevin, Alice, Saadi, Gamal, Tong, Allison, Committee, World Kidney Day Steering, and Li, Philip Kam Tao
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Kidney Disease ,Renal and urogenital ,Generic health relevance ,Good Health and Well Being ,Quality Education ,Caregivers ,Health Promotion ,Humans ,Kidney ,Patient Participation ,Renal Insufficiency ,Chronic ,World Kidney Day Steering Committee ,Urology & Nephrology ,Clinical sciences ,Nutrition and dietetics - Abstract
Living with chronic kidney disease is associated with hardships for patients and their care partners. Empowering patients and their care partners, including family members and friends involved in their care, may help minimize the burden and consequences of chronic kidney disease-related symptoms to enable increased life participation. There is a need to broaden the focus on living well with kidney disease and reengagement in life, including emphasis on the patient being in control. The World Kidney Day Joint Steering Committee has declared 2021 the year of "Living Well with Kidney Disease" in an effort to increase education about and awareness of the important goal of patient empowerment and life participation. This calls for the development and implementation of validated patient-reported outcome measures to assess and address areas of life participation in routine care. It could be supported by regulatory agencies as a metric for quality care or to support labeling claims for medicines and devices. Funding agencies could establish targeted calls for research that address the priorities of patients. Patients with kidney disease and their care partners should feel supported to live well through concerted efforts by kidney care communities, including during pandemics. In the overall wellness program for patients with kidney disease, the need for prevention should be reiterated. Early detection with prolonged course of wellness despite kidney disease, after effective secondary and tertiary prevention programs, should be promoted. World Kidney Day 2021 continues to call for increased awareness of the importance of preventive measures across populations, professionals, and policy makers, applicable to both developed and developing countries.
- Published
- 2021
7. Correction to: Living Well with Kidney Disease by patient and care-partner empowerment: Kidney Health for Everyone Everywhere.
- Author
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Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, Li, Philip Kam-Tao, Tantisattamo, Ekamol, Kumaraswami, Latha, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Lui, Siu-Fai, Ulasi, Ifeoma, Andreoli, Sharon, Balducci, Alessandro, Dupuis, Sophie, Harris, Tess, Hradsky, Anne, Knight, Richard, Kumar, Sajay, Ng, Maggie, Poidevin, Alice, Saadi, Gamal, Tong, Allison, and World Kidney Day Steering Committee
- Subjects
World Kidney Day Steering Committee ,Generic health relevance ,Renal and urogenital ,Good Health and Well Being ,Clinical Sciences ,Urology & Nephrology - Abstract
The Living Well with Kidney Disease by patient and carepartner empowerment: Kidney Health for Everyone Everywhere, written by Kamyar Kalantar-Zadeh, Philip Kam-Tao Li, Ekamol Tantisattamo, Latha Kumaraswami, Vassilios Liakopoulos, Siu-Fai Lui, Ifeoma Ulasi, Sharon Andreoli, Alessandro Balducci, Sophie Dupuis, Tess Harris, Anne Hradsky, Richard Knight, Sajay Kumar, Maggie Ng, Alice Poidevin, Gamal Saadi and Allison Tong for the World Kidney Day Steering Committee, was originally published electronically on the publisher’s internet portal on 06 March 2021 without open access. After publication in volume 34, issue 2, pages 381–388. With the author(s)’ decision to opt for Open Choice the copyright of the article changed on 21 May 2021 to © The Author(s) and the article is forthwith distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http:// creat iveco mmons. org/ licen ses/ by/4. 0/. The original article has been corrected.
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- 2021
8. Living Well With Kidney Disease by Patient and Carepartner Empowerment: Kidney Health for Everyone Everywhere.
- Author
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Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, Kam-Tao Li, Philip, Tantisattamo, Ekamol, Kumaraswami, Latha, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Lui, Siu-Fai, Ulasi, Ifeoma, Andreoli, Sharon, Balducci, Alessandro, Dupuis, Sophie, Harris, Tess, Hradsky, Anne, Knight, Richard, Kumar, Sajay, Ng, Maggie, Poidevin, Alice, Saadi, Gamal, Tong, Allison, and World Kidney Day Steering Committee
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World Kidney Day Steering Committee ,Kidney ,Humans ,Kidney Diseases ,Good Health and Well Being ,Clinical Sciences ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Urology & Nephrology - Published
- 2021
9. World Kidney Day 2021: Living Well With Kidney Disease by Patient and Care Partner Empowerment—Kidney Health for Everyone Everywhere
- Author
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Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, Li, Philip Kam-Tao, Tantisattamo, Ekamol, Kumaraswami, Latha, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Lui, Siu-Fai, Ulasi, Ifeoma, Andreoli, Sharon, Balducci, Alessandro, Dupuis, Sophie, Harris, Tess, Hradsky, Anne, Knight, Richard, Kumar, Sajay, Ng, Maggie, Poidevin, Alice, Saadi, Gamal, and Tong, Allison
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Good Health and Well Being ,Caregivers ,Global Health ,Health Services Accessibility ,Humans ,Kidney Diseases ,Patient Participation ,Public Health and Health Services ,Urology & Nephrology ,Clinical sciences - Published
- 2021
10. Reprint of: Living well with kidney disease by patient and care-partner empowerment: kidney health for everyone everywhere
- Author
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Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, Li, Philip Kam-Tao, Tantisattamo, Ekamol, Kumaraswami, Latha, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Lui, Siu-Fai, Ulasi, Ifeoma, Andreoli, Sharon, Balducci, Alessandro, Dupuis, Sophie, Harris, Tess, Hradsky, Anne, Knight, Richard, Kumar, Sajay, Ng, Maggie, Poidevin, Alice, Saadi, Gamal, Tong, Allison, Committee, World Kidney Day Steering, and Li, Philip Kam Tao
- Subjects
Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Kidney Disease ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Management of diseases and conditions ,Generic health relevance ,Renal and urogenital ,Good Health and Well Being ,Quality Education ,Early Diagnosis ,Health Promotion ,Health Services Accessibility ,Humans ,Kidney ,Renal Insufficiency ,Chronic ,care partner ,health policy ,low- to middle-income countries ,patient empowerment ,World Kidney Day Steering Committee ,Urology & Nephrology - Abstract
Living with chronic kidney disease (CKD) is associated with hardships for patients and their care partners. Empowering patients and their care partners, including family members and friends involved in their care, may help minimize the burden and consequences of CKD-related symptoms to enable increased life participation. There is a need to broaden the focus on living well with kidney disease and reengagement in life, including emphasis on the patient being in control. The World Kidney Day (WKD) Joint Steering Committee has declared 2021 the year of "Living Well with Kidney Disease" in an effort to increase education about and awareness of the important goal of patient empowerment and life participation. This calls for the development and implementation of validated patient-reported outcome measures to assess and address areas of life participation in routine care. It could be supported by regulatory agencies as a metric for quality care or to support labeling claims for medicines and devices. Funding agencies could establish targeted calls for research that address the priorities of patients. Patients with kidney disease and their care partners should feel supported to live well through concerted efforts by kidney care communities, including during pandemics. In the overall wellness program for patients with kidney disease, the need for prevention should be reiterated. Early detection with prolonged course of wellness despite kidney disease, after effective secondary and tertiary prevention programs, should be promoted. WKD 2021 continues to call for increased awareness of the importance of preventive measures across populations, professionals, and policy makers, applicable to both developed and developing countries.
- Published
- 2021
11. Living well with kidney disease by patient and care partner empowerment: kidney health for everyone everywhere
- Author
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Kalantar‐Zadeh, Kamyar, Li, Philip Kam‐Tao, Tantisattamo, Ekamol, Kumaraswami, Latha, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Lui, Siu‐Fai, Ulasi, Ifeoma, Andreoli, Sharon, Balducci, Alessandro, Dupuis, Sophie, Harris, Tess, Hradsky, Anne, Knight, Richard, Kumar, Sajay, Ng, Maggie, Poidevin, Alice, Saadi, Gamal, Tong, Allison, and Committee, for the World Kidney Day Steering
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Prevention ,Kidney Disease ,Clinical Research ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Management of diseases and conditions ,Health and social care services research ,Renal and urogenital ,Generic health relevance ,Good Health and Well Being ,Caregivers ,Health Promotion ,Health Services Accessibility ,Humans ,Kidney ,Renal Insufficiency ,Chronic ,care partner ,health policy ,low‐ ,middle‐ ,income countries ,patient empowerment ,World Kidney Day Steering Committee ,low-middle-income countries ,Surgery ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
Living with CKD is associated with hardships for patients and their care partners. Empowering patients and care partners may help minimize the burden and consequences of CKD-related symptoms to enable life participation. There is a need to broaden the focus on living well with kidney disease and re-engagement in life. The World Kidney Day (WKD) Joint Steering Committee has declared 2021 the year of 'Living Well with Kidney Disease' in an effort to increase education and awareness on the important goal of patient empowerment and life participation. This calls for the development and implementation of validated patient-reported outcome measures to address areas of life participation in routine care. It could be supported by regulatory agencies as a metric for quality care. Funding agencies could establish targeted calls for research that address the priorities of patients. Patients with kidney disease and their care partners should feel supported to live well through concerted efforts by kidney care communities including during pandemics. In the overall wellness programme for kidney disease patients, the need for prevention should be reiterated. WKD 2021 continues to call for increased awareness of the importance of preventive measures throughout populations, professionals and policy makers, applicable to both developed and developing countries.
- Published
- 2021
12. Kidney Health for Everyone Everywhere – From Prevention to Detection and Equitable Access to Care
- Author
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Li, Philip Kam-Tao, Garcia-Garcia, Guillermo, Lui, Siu-Fai, Andreoli, Sharon, Fung, Winston Wing-Shing, Hradsky, Anne, Kumaraswami, Latha, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Rakhimova, Ziyoda, Saadi, Gamal, Strani, Luisa, Ulasi, Ifeoma, and Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar
- Subjects
Health Services ,Kidney Disease ,Aging ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Prevention of disease and conditions ,and promotion of well-being ,3.1 Primary prevention interventions to modify behaviours or promote wellbeing ,Renal and urogenital ,Good Health and Well Being ,Quality Education ,Health Services Accessibility ,Humans ,Kidney ,Primary Prevention ,Renal Dialysis ,Renal Insufficiency ,Chronic ,Risk Factors ,Secondary Prevention ,Kidney diseases ,Detection ,Awareness ,for the World Kidney Day Steering Committee ,Clinical Sciences ,Urology & Nephrology - Abstract
The global burden of chronic kidney disease (CKD) is rapidly increasing with a projection of becoming the 5th most common cause of years of life lost globally by 2040. Aggravatingly, CKD is a major cause of catastrophic health expenditure. The costs of dialysis and transplantation consume up to 3% of the annual healthcare budget in high-income countries. Crucially, however, the onset and progression of CKD is often preventable. In 2020, the World Kidney Day campaign highlights the importance of preventive interventions - be it primary, secondary or tertiary. This complementing article focuses on outlining and analyzing measures that can be implemented in every country to promote and advance CKD prevention. Primary prevention of kidney disease should focus on the modification of risk factors and addressing structural abnormalities of the kidney and urinary tracts, as well as exposure to environmental risk factors and nephrotoxins. In persons with pre-existing kidney disease, secondary prevention, including blood pressure optimization and glycemic control, should be the main goal of education and clinical interventions. In patients with advanced CKD, management of co-morbidities such as uremia and cardiovascular disease is a highly recommended preventative intervention to avoid or delay dialysis or kidney transplantation. Political efforts are needed to proliferate the preventive approach. While national policies and strategies for non-communicable diseases might be present in a country, specific policies directed toward education and awareness about CKD screening, management and treatment are often lacking. Hence, there is an urgent need to increase the awareness of the importance of preventive measures throughout populations, professionals and policy makers.
- Published
- 2021
13. Mind the Gap in Kidney Care: Translating What We Know into What We Do
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Luyckx, Valerie A., primary, Tuttle, Katherine R., additional, Abdellatif, Dina, additional, Correa-Rotter, Ricardo, additional, Fung, Winston W.S., additional, Haris, Agnès, additional, Hsiao, Li-Li, additional, Khalife, Makram, additional, Kumaraswami, Latha A., additional, Loud, Fiona, additional, Raghavan, Vasundhara, additional, Roumeliotis, Stefanos, additional, Sierra, Marianella, additional, Ulasi, Ifeoma, additional, Wang, Bill, additional, Lui, Siu-Fai, additional, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, additional, Balducci, Alessandro, additional, Kumaraswami, Latha, additional, Lui, Siu Fai, additional, and Haris, Ágnes, additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Kidney health for everyone everywhere—from prevention to detection and equitable access to care
- Author
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Li, Philip Kam-Tao, Garcia-Garcia, Guillermo, Lui, Siu-Fai, Andreoli, Sharon, Fung, Winston Wing-Shing, Hradsky, Anne, Kumaraswami, Latha, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Rakhimova, Ziyoda, Saadi, Gamal, Strani, Luisa, Ulasi, Ifeoma, and Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar
- Subjects
Paediatrics ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Kidney Disease ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Aging ,Health Services ,3.1 Primary prevention interventions to modify behaviours or promote wellbeing ,Prevention of disease and conditions ,and promotion of well-being ,Renal and urogenital ,Good Health and Well Being ,Quality Education ,Disease Progression ,Global Burden of Disease ,Health Plan Implementation ,Health Policy ,Health Services Accessibility ,Humans ,Kidney Transplantation ,Mass Screening ,Renal Dialysis ,Renal Insufficiency ,Chronic ,Secondary Prevention ,Kidney diseases ,Detection ,Awareness ,World Kidney Day Steering Committee ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,Urology & Nephrology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
The global burden of chronic kidney disease (CKD) is rapidly increasing with a projection of becoming the 5th most common cause of years of life lost globally by 2040. Aggravatingly, CKD is a major cause of catastrophic health expenditure. The costs of dialysis and transplantation consume up to 3% of the annual healthcare budget in high-income countries. Crucially, however, the onset and progression of CKD are often preventable. In 2020, the World Kidney Day campaign highlights the importance of preventive interventions-be it primary, secondary, or tertiary. This complementing article focuses on outlining and analyzing measures that can be implemented in every country to promote and advance CKD prevention. Primary prevention of kidney disease should focus on the modification of risk factors and addressing structural abnormalities of the kidney and urinary tracts, as well as exposure to environmental risk factors and nephrotoxins. In persons with pre-existing kidney disease, secondary prevention, including blood pressure optimization and glycemic control, should be the main goal of education and clinical interventions. In patients with advanced CKD, the management of comorbidities such as uremia and cardiovascular disease is a highly recommended preventative intervention to avoid or delay dialysis or kidney transplantation. Political efforts are needed to proliferate the preventive approach. While national policies and strategies for non-communicable diseases might be present in a country, specific policies directed toward education and awareness about CKD screening, management, and treatment are often lacking. Hence, there is an urgent need to increase awareness of the importance of preventive measures throughout populations, professionals, and policy makers.
- Published
- 2020
15. Correction to: Kidney health for everyone everywhere: from prevention to detection and equitable access to care
- Author
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Li, Philip Kam-Tao, Garcia-Garcia, Guillermo, Lui, Siu-Fai, Andreoli, Sharon, Fung, Winston Wing-Shing, Hradsky, Anne, Kumaraswami, Latha, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Rakhimova, Ziyoda, Saadi, Gamal, Strani, Luisa, Ulasi, Ifeoma, and Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar
- Subjects
Health Services and Systems ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Good Health and Well Being ,World Kidney Day Steering Committee ,Clinical Sciences ,Urology & Nephrology ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
The copyright of the article has been incorrectly published.
- Published
- 2020
16. Reprint of: Kidney health for everyone everywhere—from prevention to detection and equitable access to care
- Author
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Li, Philip Kam-Tao, Garcia-Garcia, Guillermo, Lui, Siu-Fai, Andreoli, Sharon, Fung, Winston Wing-Shing, Hradsky, Anne, Kumaraswami, Latha, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Rakhimova, Ziyoda, Saadi, Gamal, Strani, Luisa, Ulasi, Ifeoma, Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, Committee, World Kidney Day Steering, and Li, Philip Kam Tao
- Subjects
Health Services and Systems ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Good Health and Well Being ,awareness ,detection ,kidney diseases ,prevention ,World Kidney Day Steering Committee ,Urology & Nephrology - Published
- 2020
17. Kidney Health for Everyone Everywhere - From Prevention to Detection and Equitable Access to Care.
- Author
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Li, Philip, Garcia-Garcia, Guillermo, Lui, Siu-Fai, Andreoli, Sharon, Fung, Winston, Hradsky, Anne, Kumaraswami, Latha, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Rakhimova, Ziyoda, Saadi, Gamal, Strani, Luisa, Ulasi, Ifeoma, and Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar
- Subjects
Awareness ,Detection ,Kidney diseases ,Prevention - Abstract
The global burden of chronic kidney disease (CKD) is rapidly increasing with a projection of becoming the 5th most common cause of years of life lost globally by 2040. Aggravatingly, CKD is a major cause of catastrophic health expenditure. The costs of dialysis and transplantation consume up to 3% of the annual healthcare budget in high-income countries. Crucially, however, the onset and progression of CKD is often preventable. In 2020, the World Kidney Day campaign highlights the importance of preventive interventions - be it primary, secondary or tertiary. This complementing article focuses on outlining and analyzing measures that can be implemented in every country to promote and advance CKD prevention. Primary prevention of kidney disease should focus on the modification of risk factors and addressing structural abnormalities of the kidney and urinary tracts, as well as exposure to environmental risk factors and nephrotoxins. In persons with pre-existing kidney disease, secondary prevention, including blood pressure optimization and glycemic control, should be the main goal of education and clinical interventions. In patients with advanced CKD, management of co-morbidities such as uremia and cardiovascular disease is a highly recommended preventative intervention to avoid or delay dialysis or kidney transplantation. Political efforts are needed to proliferate the preventive approach. While national policies and strategies for non-communicable diseases might be present in a country, specific policies directed toward education and awareness about CKD screening, management and treatment are often lacking. Hence, there is an urgent need to increase the awareness of the importance of preventive measures throughout populations, professionals and policy makers.
- Published
- 2020
18. Kidney Health for Everyone Everywhere, from Prevention to Detection and Equitable Access to Care.
- Author
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Kam-Tao Li, Philip, Garcia-Garcia, Guillermo, Lui, Siu-Fai, Andreoli, Sharon, Wing-Shing Fung, Winston, Hradsky, Anne, Kumaraswami, Latha, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Rakhimova, Ziyoda, Saadi, Gamal, Strani, Luisa, Ulasi, Ifeoma, and Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Kidney Disease ,Prevention ,Aging ,Health Services ,3.1 Primary prevention interventions to modify behaviours or promote wellbeing ,Prevention of disease and conditions ,and promotion of well-being ,Renal and urogenital ,Good Health and Well Being ,Quality Education ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Global Burden of Disease ,Health Education ,Health Services Accessibility ,Humans ,Primary Prevention ,Renal Dialysis ,Renal Insufficiency ,Chronic ,Risk Factors ,Secondary Prevention ,kidney diseases ,prevention ,detection ,awareness ,Public Health and Health Services ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
The global burden of chronic kidney disease (CKD) is rapidly increasing with a projection of becoming the 5th most common cause of years of life lost globally by 2040. Aggravatingly, CKD is a major cause of catastrophic health expenditure. The costs of dialysis and transplantation consume up to 3% of the annual healthcare budget in high-income countries. Crucially, however, the onset and progression of CKD is often preventable. In 2020, the World Kidney Day campaign highlights the importance of preventive interventions - be it primary, secondary, or tertiary. This complementing article focuses on outlining and analyzing measures that can be implemented in every country to promote and advance CKD prevention. Primary prevention of kidney disease should focus on the modification of risk factors and addressing structural abnormalities of the kidney and urinary tracts, as well as exposure to environmental risk factors and nephrotoxins. In persons with pre-existing kidney disease, secondary prevention; including blood pressure optimization and glycemic control, should be the main goal of education and clinical interventions. In patients with advanced CKD, management of co-morbidities such as uremia and cardiovascular disease is a highly recommended preventative intervention to avoid or delay dialysis or kidney transplantation. Political efforts are needed to proliferate the preventive approach. While national policies and strategies for non-communicable diseases might be present in a country, specific policies directed toward education and awareness about CKD screening, management and treatment are often lacking. Hence, there is an urgent need to increase the awareness of the importance of preventive measures throughout populations, professionals and policy makers.
- Published
- 2020
19. Kidney Health for Everyone Everywhere—From Prevention to Detection and Equitable Access to Care
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Li, Philip Kam‐Tao, Garcia‐Garcia, Guillermo, Lui, Siu‐Fai, Andreoli, Sharon, Fung, Winston Wing‐Shing, Hradsky, Anne, Kumaraswami, Latha, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Rakhimova, Ziyoda, Saadi, Gamal, Strani, Luisa, Ulasi, Ifeoma, Kalantar‐Zadeh, Kamyar, and Committee, for the World Kidney Day Steering
- Subjects
Health Services ,Aging ,Nutrition ,Kidney Disease ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,3.1 Primary prevention interventions to modify behaviours or promote wellbeing ,Prevention of disease and conditions ,and promotion of well-being ,Renal and urogenital ,Quality Education ,Good Health and Well Being ,Health Services Accessibility ,Health Status Disparities ,Humans ,Kidney ,Mass Screening ,Renal Insufficiency ,Chronic ,Risk Factors ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Awareness ,Detection ,Kidney diseases ,World Kidney Day Steering Committee ,Clinical Sciences ,Nursing ,Public Health and Health Services ,Urology & Nephrology - Abstract
The global burden of chronic kidney disease (CKD) is increasing with a projection of becoming the fifth leading cause of years of life lost globally by 2040. CKD is a major cause of catastrophic health expenditure. The costs of dialysis and transplantation consume up to 3% of the entire annual healthcare budget in high-income countries. Crucially, however, both the onset and progression of CKD is potentially preventable. In 2020, the World Kidney Day campaign highlights the importance of preventive interventions-be it primary, i.e. to prevent de novo CKD, or secondary or tertiary, i.e. prevention of worsening early CKD or progression of more advanced CKD to end-stage kidney disease, respectively. Primary prevention should focus on the modification of CKD risk factors and address the structural abnormalities of the kidney and urinary tracts, and exposure to environmental risk factors and nephrotoxins. In persons with pre-existing kidney disease, secondary prevention, including blood pressure optimization, glycemic control and avoiding high-protein high-sodium diet should be the main goal of education and clinical interventions. In patients with moderate to advanced CKD, the management of comorbidities such as uremia and cardiovascular disease along with low-protein diet are among the recommended preventative interventions to avoid or delay dialysis or kidney transplantation. Whereas national policies and strategies for noncommunicable diseases may exist in a country, specific policies directed toward education and awareness about CKD screening, prevention and treatment are often lacking. There is an urgent need to increase awareness for preventive measures throughout populations, professionals and policy makers.
- Published
- 2020
20. Kidney health for everyone everywhere—From prevention to detection and equitable access to care
- Author
-
Li, Philip K‐T, Garcia‐Garcia, Guillermo, Lui, Siu‐Fai, Andreoli, Sharon, Fung, Winston W‐S, Hradsky, Anne, Kumaraswami, Latha, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Rakhimova, Ziyoda, Saadi, Gamal, Strani, Luisa, Ulasi, Ifeoma, Kalantar‐Zadeh, Kamyar, and Committee, for the World Kidney Day Steering
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Health Education ,Health Services Accessibility ,Humans ,Primary Prevention ,Renal Insufficiency ,Chronic ,Secondary Prevention ,World Kidney Day Steering Committee ,Urology & Nephrology ,Clinical sciences - Published
- 2020
21. Kidney health for everyone, everywhere: from prevention to detection and equitable access to care.
- Author
-
Li, Philip K-T, Garcia-Garcia, Guillermo, Lui, Siu-Fai, Andreoli, Sharon, Fung, Winston W-S, Hradsky, Anne, Kumaraswami, Latha, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Rakhimova, Ziyoda, Saadi, Gamal, Strani, Luisa, Ulasi, Ifeoma, Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, and World Kidney Day Steering Committee
- Subjects
World Kidney Day Steering Committee ,Humans ,Early Diagnosis ,Internet ,Health Promotion ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,National Health Programs ,Health Services Accessibility ,Patient Care Team ,Renal Insufficiency ,Chronic ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,General & Internal Medicine - Published
- 2020
22. Kidney health for everyone everywhere-from prevention to detection and equitable access to care.
- Author
-
Li, Philip KT, Garcia-Garcia, Guillermo, Lui, SF, Andreoli, Sharon, Fung, Winston WS, Hradsky, Anne, Kumaraswami, Latha, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Rakhimova, Ziyoda, Saadi, Gamal, Strani, Luisa, Ulasi, Ifeoma, and Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,World Kidney Day Steering Committee ,Medical and Health Sciences ,General & Internal Medicine ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Published
- 2020
23. Carga, acceso y disparidades en enfermedad renal
- Author
-
Crews, Deidra C, Bello, Aminu K, Saadi, Gamal, Committee, for the World Kidney Day Steering, de Dirección son, Los miembros del Comité del Día Mundial del Riñón, Li, Philip Kam Tao, Garcia-Garcia, Guillermo, Andreoli, Sharon, Crews, Deidra, Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, Kernahan, Charles, Kumaraswami, Latha, and Strani, Luisa
- Subjects
Acute Kidney Injury ,Cost of Illness ,Developed Countries ,Developing Countries ,Diabetic Nephropathies ,Health Personnel ,Health Policy ,Health Services Accessibility ,Healthcare Disparities ,Humans ,Hypertension ,Kidney Diseases ,Renal Dialysis ,Risk Factors ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Vulnerable Populations ,World Kidney Day Steering Committee ,Los miembros del Comité de Dirección del Día Mundial del Riñón son - Published
- 2020
24. Kidney health for all: bridging the gap in kidney health education and literacy
- Author
-
Langham, Robyn G., Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, Bonner, Ann, Balducci, Alessandro, Hsiao, Li-Li, Kumaraswami, Latha A., Laffin, Paul, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Saadi, Gamal, Tantisattamo, Ekamol, Ulasi, Ifeoma, and Lui, Siu-Fai
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Burden, access and disparities in kidney disease
- Author
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Crews, Deidra C, Bello, Aminu K, Saadi, Gamal, Li, Philip Kam Tao, Garcia-Garcia, Guillermo, Andreoli, Sharon, Crews, Deidra, Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, Kernahan, Charles, Kumaraswami, Latha, and Strani, Luisa
- Subjects
Kidney Disease ,Health Services ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,Health and social care services research ,Renal and urogenital ,Good Health and Well Being ,acute kidney injury ,end stage renal disease ,global health ,health equity ,social determinants of health ,World Kidney Day Steering Committee - Abstract
Kidney disease is a global public health problem, affecting over 750 million persons worldwide. The burden of kidney disease varies substantially across the world, as does its detection and treatment. In many settings, rates of kidney disease and the provision of its care are defined by socio-economic, cultural, and political factors leading to significant disparities. World Kidney Day 2019 offers an opportunity to raise awareness of kidney disease and highlight disparities in its burden and current state of global capacity for prevention and management. Here, we highlight that many countries still lack access to basic diagnostics, a trained nephrology workforce, universal access to primary health care, and renal replacement therapies. We point to the need for strengthening basic infrastructure for kidney care services for early detection and management of acute kidney injury and chronic kidney disease across all countries and advocate for more pragmatic approaches to providing renal replacement therapies. Achieving universal health coverage worldwide by 2030 is one of the World Health Organization's Sustainable Development Goals. While universal health coverage may not include all elements of kidney care in all countries, understanding what is feasible and important for a country or region with a focus on reducing the burden and consequences of kidney disease would be an important step towards achieving kidney health equity.
- Published
- 2019
26. Reprint of: Burden, access, and disparities in kidney disease
- Author
-
Crews, Deidra C, Bello, Aminu K, Saadi, Gamal, Committee, World Kidney Day Steering, Li, Philip Kam Tao, Garcia-Garcia, Guillermo, Andreoli, Sharon, Crews, Deidra, Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, Kernahan, Charles, Kumaraswami, Latha, and Strani, Luisa
- Subjects
Acute kidney injury ,End stage renal disease ,Global health ,Health equity ,Social determinants of health ,World Kidney Day Steering Committee ,Urology & Nephrology - Published
- 2019
27. Mind the Gap in Kidney Care: Translating What We Know Into What We Do.
- Author
-
Luyckx, Valerie A, Tuttle, Katherine R, Abdellatif, Dina, Correa-Rotter, Ricardo, Fung, Winston W S, Haris, Agnès, Hsiao, Li-Li, Khalife, Makram, Kumaraswami, Latha A, Loud, Fiona, Raghavan, Vasundhara, Roumeliotis, Stefanos, Sierra, Marianella, Ulasi, Ifeoma, Wang, Bill, Lui, Siu-Fai, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, and Balducci;, Alessandro
- Subjects
HEART failure ,NON-communicable diseases ,RENAL osteodystrophy ,NEPHROLOGISTS ,MEDICAL personnel ,MANAGEMENT of electronic health records - Abstract
The article discusses the global burden of kidney disease and the gaps in kidney care, particularly in low- and middle-income countries. It highlights the high death rates and economic burden associated with chronic kidney disease (CKD) and the disparities in prevention, early detection, diagnosis, and treatment. The text emphasizes the importance of integrating kidney care into national non-communicable disease strategies and strengthening health systems. It also discusses the challenges in managing CKD, including the need for regulation and monitoring of drug manufacturing, the importance of real-world data, and strategies to improve CKD management. The article addresses the cost and availability of medication for individuals with kidney disease, highlighting the paradoxical situation in high-income countries and the catastrophic health expenditure in low- and middle-income countries. It calls for pharmaceutical companies to ensure diverse participation in research studies and fair pricing of effective drugs. The article also emphasizes the need to focus on children with kidney diseases and suggests strategies to improve kidney disease care, including the use of polypills and digital technologies. It concludes with a call to action to address barriers and disparities in access to diagnosis and treatment and to ensure equitable kidney care worldwide. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. What We Do and Do Not Know About Women and Kidney Diseases; Questions Unanswered and Answers Unquestioned: Reflection on World Kidney Day and International Woman's Day.
- Author
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Piccoli, Giorgina B, Alrukhaimi, Mona, Liu, Zhi-Hong, Zakharova, Elena, Levin, Adeera, Li, Philip Kam Tao, Garcia-Garcia, Guillermo, Benghanem-Gharbi, Mohammed, Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, Kernahan, Charles, Kumaraswami, Latha, Piccoli, Giorgina Barbara, Saadi, Gamal, Fox, Louise, and Andreoli, Sharon
- Subjects
Biomedical Research ,Female ,Global Health ,Health Promotion ,Health Status Disparities ,Healthcare Disparities ,Humans ,Pregnancy ,Prognosis ,Renal Insufficiency ,Chronic ,Risk Factors ,Sex Distribution ,Sex Factors ,Women's Health ,World Kidney Day Steering Committee ,Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology - Published
- 2018
29. Women and kidney disease: reflections on World Kidney Day 2018: Kidney Health and Women's Health: a case for optimizing outcomes for present and future generations.
- Author
-
Piccoli, Giorgina B, Alrukhaimi, Mona, Liu, Zhi-Hong, Zakharova, Elena, Levin, Adeera, Tao Li, Philip Kam, Garcia-Garcia, Guillermo, Benghanem-Gharbi, Mohammed, Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, Kernahan, Charles, Kumaraswami, Latha, Piccoli, Giorgina Barbara, Saadi, Gamal, Fox, Louise, and Andreoli, Sharon
- Subjects
Kidney Disease ,Clinical Research ,Renal and urogenital ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Good Health and Well Being ,Gender Equality ,Female ,Humans ,Kidney Transplantation ,Pregnancy ,Renal Dialysis ,Renal Insufficiency ,Chronic ,Women's Health ,access to care ,acute and chronic kidney disease ,inequities ,kidney health ,women ,World Kidney Day Steering Committee ,Clinical Sciences ,Urology & Nephrology - Abstract
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) affects ∼10% of the world's adult population: it is one of the top 20 causes of death worldwide and its impact on patients and their families can be devastating. World Kidney Day and International Women's Day coincide in 2018, thus offering an opportunity to reflect on the importance of women's health, and specifically their kidney health, on the community and the next generations, as well as to strive to be more curious about the unique aspects of kidney disease in women so that we may apply these learnings more broadly. Girls and women, who make up ∼50% of the world's population, are important contributors to society and their families. Gender differences continue to exist around the world in access to education, medical care and participation in clinical studies. Pregnancy is a unique state for women, offering an opportunity for the diagnosis of kidney disease, and also a state where acute and chronic kidney diseases may manifest and that may impact future generations with respect to kidney health. There are various autoimmune and other conditions that are more likely to impact women with profound consequences for childbearing and on the fetus. Women have different complications on dialysis than men and are more likely to be donors than recipients of kidney transplants. In this editorial we focus on what we do and do not know about women, kidney health and kidney disease and what we might learn in the future to improve outcomes worldwide.
- Published
- 2018
30. Women and kidney disease: reflections on World Kidney Day 2018
- Author
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Piccoli, Giorgina B, Alrukhaimi, Mona, Liu, Zhi-Hong, Zakharova, Elena, Levin, Adeera, Committee, World Kidney Day Steering, Li, Philip Kam Tao, Garcia-Garcia, Guillermo, Benghanem-Gharbi, Mohammed, Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, Kernahan, Charles, Kumaraswami, Latha, Piccoli, Giorgina Barbara, Saadi, Gamal, Fox, Louise, and Andreoli, Sharon
- Subjects
Female ,Global Health ,Health Promotion ,Health Status Disparities ,Healthcare Disparities ,Humans ,Prognosis ,Renal Insufficiency ,Chronic ,Risk Factors ,Sex Factors ,Women's Health ,access to care ,acute and chronic kidney disease ,inequities ,kidney health ,women ,World Kidney Day Steering Committee ,Clinical Sciences ,Urology & Nephrology - Published
- 2018
31. Mind the gap in kidney care: translating what we know into what we do
- Author
-
Balducci, Alessandro, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Hsiao, Li-Li, Correa-Rotter, Ricardo, Ulasi, Ifeoma, Kumaraswami, Latha, Lui, Siu Fai, Abdellatif, Dina, Haris, Ágnes, Luyckx, Valerie A., Tuttle, Katherine R., Fung, Winston W.S., Haris, Agnès, Khalife, Makram, Kumaraswami, Latha A., Loud, Fiona, Raghavan, Vasundhara, Roumeliotis, Stefanos, Sierra, Marianella, Wang, Bill, and Lui, Siu-Fai
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Kidney health for all: preparedness for the unexpected in supporting the vulnerable
- Author
-
Hsiao, Li-Li, primary, Shah, Kavya M., additional, Liew, Adrian, additional, Abdellatif, Dina, additional, Balducci, Alessandro, additional, Haris, Ágnes, additional, Kumaraswami, Latha A., additional, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, additional, Lui, Siu-Fai, additional, Ulasi, Ifeoma, additional, Langham, Robyn G., additional, Hsiao, Li-Li, additional, Poidevin, Alice, additional, and Hradsky, Anne, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Kidney Health for All: Bridging the Gap in Kidney Health Education and Literacy
- Author
-
Langham, Robyn G., primary, Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, additional, Bonner, Ann, additional, Balducci, Alessandro, additional, Hsiao, Li-Li, additional, Kumaraswami, Latha A., additional, Laffin, Paul, additional, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, additional, Saadi, Gamal, additional, Tantisattamo, Ekamol, additional, Ulasi, Ifeoma, additional, Lui, Siu-Fai, additional, and Langham, Robyn G., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Kidney health for all: bridging the gap in kidney health education and literacy
- Author
-
Langham, Robyn, primary, Kalantar-Zadeh, Kalantar, additional, Bonner, Ann, additional, Balducci, Alessandro, additional, Hsiao, Li-Li, additional, Kumaraswami, Latha, additional, Laffin, Paul, additional, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, additional, Saadi, Gamal, additional, Tantisattamo, Ekamol, additional, Ulasi, Ifeoma, additional, and Lui, Siu-Fai, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Saúde dos rins para todos: preenchendo a lacuna de educação e conhecimento sobre a saúde renal
- Author
-
Langham, Robyn G., primary, Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, additional, Bonner, Ann, additional, Balducci, Alessandro, additional, Hsiao, Li-Li, additional, Kumaraswami, Latha A., additional, Laffin, Paul, additional, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, additional, Saadi, Gamal, additional, Tantisattamo, Ekamol, additional, Ulasi, Ifeoma, additional, and Lui, Siu-Fai, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Kidney Health for All: bridging the gap in kidney health education and literacy
- Author
-
Langham, Robyn G, primary, Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, additional, Bonner, Ann, additional, Balducci, Alessandro, additional, Hsiao, LL, additional, Kumaraswami, Latha A, additional, Laffin, Paul, additional, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, additional, Saadi, Gamal, additional, Tantisattamo, Ekamol, additional, Ulasi, Ifeoma, additional, and Lui, SF, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The authors reply
- Author
-
Balducci, Alessandro, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Hsiao, Li-Li, Correa-Rotter, Ricardo, Ulasi, Ifeoma, Kumaraswami, Latha, Lui, Siu Fai, Abdellatif, Dina, Haris, Ágnes, Fung, Winston W.S., Luyckx, Valerie A., and Tuttle, Katherine R.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Kidney Health for All: Bridging the Gap in Kidney Health Education and Literacy.
- Author
-
Langham, Robyn G., Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, Bonner, Ann, Balducci, Alessandro, Li-Li Hsiao, Kumaraswami, Latha A., Laffin, Paul, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Saadi, Gamal, Tantisattamo, Ekamol, Ulasi, Ifeoma, and Siu-Fai Lui
- Subjects
KIDNEY disease prevention ,HEALTH education ,HEALTH policy ,PATIENT advocacy ,HEALTH literacy ,HEALTH equity ,DECISION making in clinical medicine ,POLICY sciences ,INFORMATION technology - Abstract
The high burden of kidney disease, global disparities in kidney care, and poor outcomes of kidney failure bring a concomitant growing burden to persons affected, their families, and carers, and the community at large. Health literacy is the degree to which persons and organizations have or equitably enable individuals to have the ability to find, understand, and use information and services to make informed health-related decisions and actions for themselves and others. Rather than viewing health literacy as a patient deficit, improving health literacy largely rests with health-care providers communicating and educating effectively in codesigned partnership with those with kidney disease. For kidney policy makers, health literacy provides the imperative to shift organizations to a culture that places the person at the center of health care. The growing capability of and access to technology provides new opportunities to enhance education and awareness of kidney disease for all stakeholders. Advances in telecommunication, including social media platforms, can be leveraged to enhance persons' and providers' education; The World Kidney Day declares 2022 as the year of "Kidney Health for All" to promote global teamwork in advancing strategies in bridging the gap in kidney health education and literacy. Kidney organizations should work toward shifting the patient-deficit health literacy narrative to that of being the responsibility of health-care providers and health policy makers. By engaging in and supporting kidney health-centered policy making, community health planning, and health literacy approaches for all, the kidney communities strive to prevent kidney diseases and enable living well with kidney disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Living well with kidney disease by patient and care-partner empowerment: kidney health for everyone everywhere
- Author
-
Tao Li, Philip Kam, Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, Andreoli, Sharon, Balducci, Alessandro, Dupuis, Sophie, Kumaraswami, Latha, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Lui, Siu-Fai, Saadi, Gamal, Ulasi, Ifeoma, Kam-Tao Li, Philip, Tantisattamo, Ekamol, Harris, Tess, Hradsky, Anne, Knight, Richard, Kumar, Sajay, Ng, Maggie, Poidevin, Alice, and Tong, Allison
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Burden, access, and disparities in kidney disease
- Author
-
Kam Tao Li, Philip, Garcia-Garcia, Guillermo, Andreoli, Sharon, Crews, Deidra, Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, Kernahan, Charles, Kumaraswami, Latha, Saadi, Gamal, Strani, Luisa, Crews, Deidra C., and Bello, Aminu K.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Carga, acceso y disparidades en enfermedad renal
- Author
-
Kam Tao Li, Philip, Garcia-Garcia, Guillermo, Andreoli, Sharon, Crews, Deidra, Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, Kernahan, Charles, Kumaraswami, Latha, Saadi, Gamal, Strani, Luisa, Crews, Deidra C., and Bello, Aminu K.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Kidney Health for All: Bridging the Gap in Kidney Health Education and Literacy.
- Author
-
Langham, Robyn G., Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, Bonner, Ann, Balducci, Alessandro, Hsiao, Li-Li, Kumaraswami, Latha A., Laffin, Paul, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Saadi, Gamal, Tantisattamo, Ekamol, Ulasi, Ifeoma, and Lui, Siu-Fai
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Kidney health for all: bridging the gap in kidney health education and literacy†.
- Author
-
Langham, Robyn G., Kalantar‐Zadeh, Kamyar, Bonner, Ann, Balducci, Alessandro, Hsiao, Li‐Li, Kumaraswami, Latha A., Laffin, Paul, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Saadi, Gamal, Tantisattamo, Ekamol, Ulasi, Ifeoma, and Lui, Siu‐Fai
- Subjects
KIDNEY physiology ,CHRONIC kidney failure ,HEALTH education ,SELF-management (Psychology) ,HEALTH literacy ,QUALITY of life ,CORPORATE culture - Abstract
An editorial is presented on increasing partnerships between health centred policy, community health planning and health literacy. Topics include low HL abilities in people with CKD demonstrating an association with poor CKD knowledge, self-management behaviours, and health-related quality of life; and emphasis shifting to policy directives, organisational culture, and healthcare providers.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Appendix_1 – Supplemental material for Kidney Health for Everyone Everywhere: From Prevention to Detection and Equitable Access to Care
- Author
-
Li, Philip Kam-Tao, Garcia-Garcia, Guillermo, Siu-Fai Lui, Andreoli, Sharon, Fung, Winston Wing-Shing, Hradsky, Anne, Kumaraswami, Latha, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Ziyoda Rakhimova, Saadi, Gamal, Strani, Luisa, Ifeoma Ulasi, and Kamyar Kalantar-Zadeh
- Subjects
Medicine - Abstract
Supplemental material, Appendix_1 for Kidney Health for Everyone Everywhere: From Prevention to Detection and Equitable Access to Care by Philip Kam-Tao Li, Guillermo Garcia-Garcia, Siu-Fai Lui, Sharon Andreoli, Winston Wing-Shing Fung, Anne Hradsky, Latha Kumaraswami, Vassilios Liakopoulos, Ziyoda Rakhimova, Gamal Saadi, Luisa Strani, Ifeoma Ulasi and Kamyar Kalantar-Zadeh in Canadian Journal of Kidney Health and Disease
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Salud renal para todos en todas partes - desde la prevención hasta la detección y el acceso equitativo a la atención
- Author
-
Kam-Tao Li, Philip, primary, Garcia-Garcia, Guillermo, additional, Lui, Siu-Fai, additional, Andreoli, Sharon, additional, Wing-Shing Fung, Winston, additional, Hradsky, Anne, additional, Kumaraswami, Latha, additional, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, additional, Rakhimova, Ziyoda, additional, Saadi, Gamal, additional, Strani, Luisa, additional, Ulasi, Ifeoma, additional, and Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Kidney Health for Everyone Everywhere - from Prevention to Detection and Equitable Access to Care
- Author
-
Kam-Tao Li, Philip, primary, Garcia-Garcia, Guillermo, additional, Lui, Siu-Fai, additional, Andreoli, Sharon, additional, Fung, Winston Wing-Shing, additional, Hradsky, Anne, additional, Kumaraswami, Latha, additional, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, additional, Rakhimova, Ziyoda, additional, Saadi, Gamal, additional, Strani, Luisa, additional, Ulasi, Ifeoma, additional, and Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Kidney health for everyone everywhere – from prevention to detection and equitable access to care
- Author
-
Li, Philip Kam-Tao, primary, Garcia-Garcia, Guillermo, additional, Lui, Siu-Fai, additional, Andreoli, Sharon, additional, Fung, Winston Wing-Shing, additional, Hradsky, Anne, additional, Kumaraswami, Latha, additional, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, additional, Rakhimova, Ziyoda, additional, Saadi, Gamal, additional, Strani, Luisa, additional, Ulasi, Ifeoma, additional, and Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Burden, access, and disparities in kidney disease
- Author
-
Crews, Deidra C., primary, Bello, Aminu K., additional, Saadi, Gamal, additional, Kam Tao Li, Philip, additional, Garcia-Garcia, Guillermo, additional, Andreoli, Sharon, additional, Crews, Deidra, additional, Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, additional, Kernahan, Charles, additional, Kumaraswami, Latha, additional, and Strani, Luisa, additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Kidney health for everyone everywhere - from prevention to detection and equitable access to care
- Author
-
Li, PhilipKam-Tao, primary, Garcia-Garcia, Guillermo, additional, Lui, Siu-Fai, additional, Andreoli, Sharon, additional, Fung, WinstonWing-Shing, additional, Hradsky, Anne, additional, Kumaraswami, Latha, additional, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, additional, Rakhimova, Ziyoda, additional, Saadi, Gamal, additional, Strani, Luisa, additional, Ulasi, Ifeoma, additional, and Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Burden, Access, and Disparities in Kidney Disease
- Author
-
Crews, Deidra C., primary, Bello, Aminu K., additional, Saadi, Gamal, additional, Li, Philip Kam Tao, additional, Garcia-Garcia, Guillermo, additional, Andreoli, Sharon, additional, Crews, Deidra, additional, Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, additional, Kernahan, Charles, additional, Kumaraswami, Latha, additional, and Strani, Luisa, additional
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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