Guillermo Garcia Garcia
1*, Paul Harden
2, Jeremy Chapman
31 Nephrology Service, Hospital Civil de Guadalajara, University of Guadalajara Health Sciences Center Hospital 278, Guadalajara, Jal. 44280, Mexico.
2 Oxford Kidney Unit and Oxford Transplant Centre, Churchill Hospital, Oxford, United Kingdom.
3 Centre for Transplant and Renal Research, West mead Millennium Institute, Sydney University, West mead Hospital, Sydney, NSW, 2145, Australia.
4 World Kidney Day (WKD) is a joint initiative of the International Society of Nephrology and the International Federations of Kidney Foundations.
*Corresponding Author: *Corresponding author: World Kidney Day, International Society of Nephrology, Rue des Fabriques 1, 1000 Brussels, Belgium. Telephone: 0015672489703, Fax: 0019082727101, , Email:
smartin@theisn.org
Abstract
World Kidney Day on March 8th 2012 provides a chance to reflect on the success of kidney transplantation as a therapy for end stage kidney disease that surpasses dialysis treatments both for the quality and quantity of life that it provides and for its cost effectiveness. Anything that is both cheaper and better, but is not actually the dominant therapy, must have other drawbacks that prevent replacement of all dialysis treatment by transplantation. The barriers to universal transplantation as the therapy for end stage kidney disease include the economic limitations which, in some countries place transplantation, appropriately, at a lower priority than public health fundamentals such as clean water, sanitation and vaccination. Even in high income countries the technical challenges of surgery and the consequences of immunosuppression restrict the number of suitable recipients, but the major finite restrictions on kidney transplantation rates are the shortage of donated organs and the limited medical, surgical and nursing workforces with the required expertise. These problems have solutions which involve the full range of societal, professional, governmental and political environments. World Kidney Day is a call to deliver transplantation therapy to the one million people a year who have a right to benefit.
Implication for health policy/practice/research/medical education:
World Kidney Day on March 8th 2012 provides a chance to reflect on the success of kidney transplantation as a therapy for end stage kidney disease that surpasses dialysis treatments both for the quality and quantity of life that it provides and for its cost effectiveness.
Please cite this paper as: Garcia Garcia G, Harden P, Jeremy Chapman J. The Global Role of Kidney Transplantation. J Nephropathology. 2012; 1(2): 69-76. DOI: 10.5812/nephropathol.7448