4.6 Article

The European Kidney Health Alliance (EKHA) and the Decade of the Kidney™

Journal

NEPHROLOGY DIALYSIS TRANSPLANTATION
Volume 38, Issue 5, Pages 1113-1122

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/ndt/gfac211

Keywords

advocacy; Decade of the Kidney; European Commission; European Kidney Health Alliance (EKHA); patient-oriented outcomes; policy

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The European Kidney Health Alliance is an advocacy organization that aims to defend the rights of kidney patients and the nephrological community. They have partnered with the American Association of Kidney Patients to launch the Decade of the Kidney initiative, advocating for innovation in kidney care. This article provides an overview of the medical and patient burden of kidney disease, the history and activities of EKHA, and the need for innovation in kidney care.
The European Kidney Health Alliance (EKHA) is an advocacy organization that defends the case of the kidney patients and the nephrological community at the level of the European Union (EU), and from there, top to bottom, also at the national level of the EU member states and the EU-associated countries. The Decade of the Kidney (TM) is a global initiative launched by the American Association of Kidney Patients (AAKP) to create greater awareness and organize patient demands for long overdue innovation in kidney care. This article describes the medical and patient burden of kidney disease, the history of EKHA, its major activities and tools for policy action, and the need for innovation of kidney care. We then describe the Decade of the Kidney (TM) initiative, the rationale behind why EKHA joined this activity to emanate parallel action at the European side, the novel professionalized structure of EKHA, and its immediate targets. The final aim is to align all major stakeholders for an action plan on kidney disease comparable to Europe's successful Beating Cancer Plan, with the additional intent that the EKHA model is applied also by the respective national kidney-related societies to create a broad mobilization at all levels. The ultimate aims are that the EU considers chronic kidney disease (CKD) as a major health and health-economic problem, to consequently have CKD included as a key health research target by the European Commission, and to improve quality of life and outcomes for all kidney patients.

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