March 14, 2021
KUALA LUMPUR (BERNAMA) -The number of Malaysians with kidney failure is expected to reach 106,000 by 2040, said Malaysian Health Director-General Dr Noor Hisham Abdullah.
Dr Noor Hisham said what’s alarming is that 30 per cent of them are young people under the age of 45 and this could have a negative impact on the country’s socio-economy.
He said to date there are about 40,000 kidney failure patients undergoing dialysis treatment nationwide.
“According to a study about 8,000 new patients were confirmed in 2018 and this trend is increasing every year … if this continues then the number of patients requiring dialysis will reach 106,000 in 2040,” he said when officiating National Kidney Day 2021 virtually in Malaysia yesterday.
Saturday, 13 Mar 2021 03:51 PM MYT
Health director-general Tan Sri Dr Noor Hisham Abdullah says the number of Malaysians with kidney failure is expected to reach 106,000 by 2040. Picture by Miera Zulyana
Subscribe to our Telegram channel for the latest updates on news you need to know.
KUALA LUMPUR, March 13 ― The number of Malaysians with kidney failure is expected to reach 106,000 by 2040, said Health director-general Tan Sri Dr Noor Hisham Abdullah.
Dr Noor Hisham said what’s alarming is that 30 per cent of them are young people under the age of 45 and this could have a negative impact on the country s socio-economy.
He said to date there are about 40,000 kidney failure patients undergoing dialysis treatment nationwide.
Kidney diseases weighing on public healthcare expenditure
This article is in conjunction with World Kidney Day 2021 which falls on March 11 every year. 10 Mar 2021 / 10:05 H. Pix for representational purpose only.
KUALA LUMPUR: The burden of chronic and non-communicable diseases (NCDs) in the country continues to weigh heavily on the national healthcare system, with news reports highlighting the growing numbers of Malaysians impacted by often preventable diseases that lead to deteriorating quality of life and a growing cost to the healthcare budget.
Recent studies carried out by local health experts have shown that chronic kidney disease (CKD) has become one of the leading public health issues in Malaysia with increased prevalence and low awareness.
Govt urged to give CKD patients priority in vaccination 01 Feb 2021 / 19:02 H. Pix for illustration purposes.
KUALA
LUMPUR: The government has been urged to give priority to patients with Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) in its Covid-19 vaccination programme.
The call was jointly made by National Kidney Foundation chairman Datuk Dr Zaki Morad, Malaysian Society of Nephrology president Prof Dr Abdul Halim Abdul Gafor and Malaysian Society of Transplantation president Dr Rosnawati Yahya
They said this would reduce overcrowding in the Ministry of Health’s haemodialysis (HD) centres and help return some normalcy to HD centres run by private and non-governmental organisations.
Give CKD patients priority in vaccination programme
February 1, 2021
KUALA LUMPUR – The government has been urged to give priority to patients with Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) in its COVID-19 vaccination programme.
The call was jointly made by National Kidney Foundation chairman Datuk Dr Zaki Morad, Malaysian Society of Nephrology president Prof Dr Abdul Halim Abdul Gafor and Malaysian Society of Transplantation president Dr Rosnawati Yahya
Advertisement
They said this would reduce overcrowding in the Ministry of Health’s haemodialysis (HD) centres and help return some normalcy to HD centres run by private and non-governmental organisations.
They said priority should be given to groups such as patients on haemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis, patients with functioning kidney transplants and patients with CKD stage 3-4 (pre-dialysis).