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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
- Brazilian Journal of Nephrology. June 2022 44(2)
- Subjects
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Educational Gap, Empowerment, Health Literacy, Health Policy, Information Technology, Kidney Health, Partnership, Prevention, and Social Media
- Abstract
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The high burden of kidney disease, global disparities in kidney care, and the poor outcomes of kidney failure place a growing burden on affected individuals and their families, caregivers, and the community at large. Health literacy is the degree to which individuals 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 lies primarily with health care providers communicating and educating effectively in codesigned partnership with those with kidney disease. For kidney policy makers, health literacy is a prerequisite for organizations to transition 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.
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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
- Brazilian Journal of Nephrology. June 2021 43(2)
- Subjects
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Patient Participation, Caregivers, Developing Countries, and Health Policy
- Abstract
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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 or friends involved in their care, may help minimize 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 emphasis on patients 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 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 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 throughout populations, professionals, and policy makers, applicable to both developed and developing countries.
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3. Saúde dos rins para todos: preenchendo a lacuna de educação e conhecimento sobre a saúde renal [2023]
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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
- Brazilian Journal of Nephrology. 44(2)
- Abstract
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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.
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Cepaityte, Dainora, Leivaditis, Konstantinos, Varouktsi, Garyfallia, Roumeliotis, Athanasios, Roumeliotis, Stefanos, and Liakopoulos, Vassilios
- International Urology and Nephrology. 55(6):1481-1492
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D’Arrigo, Graziella, Gori, Mercedes, Pitino, Annalisa, Tsalikakis, Dimitrios G., Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Roumeliotis, Stefanos, and Tripepi, Giovanni
- International Urology and Nephrology. :1-6
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Karakousis, Nikolaos D., Biliou, Smaragda, Pyrgioti, Elisavet E., Georgakopoulos, Petros N., Liakopoulos, Vassilios, and Papanas, Nikolaos
- International Urology and Nephrology. 55(5):1173-1181
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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
- Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research. January 2021 54(6)
- Subjects
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Patient empowerment, Care-partner, Low-middle-income countries, and Health policy
- Abstract
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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 or friends involved in their care, may help minimize 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 emphasis on patients 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 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 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 throughout populations, professionals, and policy makers, applicable to both developed and developing countries.
- Full text View on content provider's site
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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, Lui, Siu-Fai, and World Kidney Day Joint Steering Committee
- Journal of renal nutrition : the official journal of the Council on Renal Nutrition of the National Kidney Foundation. 32(6)
- Subjects
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World Kidney Day Joint Steering Committee, Kidney, Humans, Kidney Transplantation, Health Education, Health Literacy, Behavioral and Social Science, Prevention, Kidney Disease, Clinical Research, Health Services, Patient Safety, Health and social care services research, 8.1 Organisation and delivery of services, Renal and urogenital, Generic health relevance, Quality Education, Good Health and Well Being, Delivery of Health Care, Health Policy, Educational Status, Health Personnel, United States, Educational Gap, Empowerment, Information Technology, Kidney Health, Partnership, Social Media, Clinical Sciences, Nutrition and Dietetics, and Urology & Nephrology
- Abstract
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The high burden of kidney disease, global disparities in kidney care, and the poor outcomes of kidney failure place a growing burden on affected individuals and their families, caregivers, and the community at large. Health literacy is the degree to which individuals 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 lies primarily with health care providers communicating and educating effectively in codesigned partnership with those with kidney disease. For kidney policy makers, health literacy is a prerequisite for organizations to transition 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.
- Full text View record at eScholarship
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Georgianos, Panagiotis I., Papachristou, Evangelos, and Liakopoulos, Vassilios
- Hypertension Research. 46(4):890-892
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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, Lui, Siu-Fai, and World Kidney Day Joint Steering Committee
- Journal of nephrology. 35(6)
- Subjects
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World Kidney Day Joint Steering Committee, Kidney, Humans, Health Education, Health Personnel, Health Literacy, Educational gap, Empowerment, Health literacy, Health policy, Information technology, Kidney health, Partnership, Prevention, Social media, Kidney Disease, Behavioral and Social Science, Clinical Research, Patient Safety, Health Services, Renal and urogenital, Generic health relevance, Quality Education, Good Health and Well Being, Clinical Sciences, and Urology & Nephrology
- Abstract
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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.
- Full text View record at eScholarship
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Georgianos, Panagiotis I., Eleftheriadis, Theodoros, and Liakopoulos, Vassilios
- European Journal of Clinical Investigation. February, 2023, Vol. 53 Issue 2, pn/a, 5 p.
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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, Lui, Siu-Fai, and World Kidney Day Joint Steering Committee
- Journal of renal care. 48(2)
- Subjects
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World Kidney Day Joint Steering Committee, Kidney, Humans, Health Education, Health Literacy, educational gap, empowerment, health literacy, health policy, information technology, kidney health, partnership, prevention, social media, Clinical Sciences, Nursing, Public Health and Health Services, and Urology & Nephrology
- Full text View record at eScholarship
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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, Lui, Siu-Fai, and World Kidney Day Joint Steering Committee
- American journal of hypertension. 35(5)
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World Kidney Day Joint Steering Committee, Kidney, Health Education, Health Literacy, Clinical Sciences, and Cardiovascular System & Hematology
- Full text View record at eScholarship
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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, Lui, Siu-Fai, and World Kidney Day Joint Steering Committee
- Internal medicine journal. 52(4)
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World Kidney Day Joint Steering Committee, Kidney, Humans, Health Education, Health Literacy, Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology, Clinical Sciences, Public Health and Health Services, and General & Internal Medicine
- Full text View record at eScholarship
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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
- Jornal brasileiro de nefrologia : 'orgao oficial de Sociedades Brasileira e Latino-Americana de Nefrologia. 44(2)
- Subjects
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Kidney, Humans, Health Policy, Delivery of Health Care, and Health Literacy
- Abstract
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The high burden of kidney disease, global disparities in kidney care, and the poor outcomes of kidney failure place a growing burden on affected individuals and their families, caregivers, and the community at large. Health literacy is the degree to which individuals 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 lies primarily with health care providers communicating and educating effectively in codesigned partnership with those with kidney disease. For kidney policy makers, health literacy is a prerequisite for organizations to transition 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.
- Full text View record at eScholarship
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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, Lui, Siu-Fai, and World Kidney Day Joint Steering Committee
- Clinical nephrology. 97(4)
- Subjects
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World Kidney Day Joint Steering Committee, Kidney, Humans, Health Education, Health Literacy, Kidney Disease, Patient Safety, Behavioral and Social Science, Clinical Research, Prevention, Health Services, Renal and urogenital, Generic health relevance, Quality Education, Good Health and Well Being, Clinical Sciences, and Urology & Nephrology
- Abstract
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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.
- Full text View record at eScholarship
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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, Lui, Siu-Fai, and World Kidney Day Joint Steering Committee
- Nephrology (Carlton, Vic.). 27(4)
- Subjects
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World Kidney Day Joint Steering Committee, Kidney, Humans, Health Education, Health Literacy, Clinical Sciences, and Urology & Nephrology
- Full text View record at eScholarship
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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, Lui, Siu-Fai, and World Kidney Day Joint Steering Committee
- Clinical kidney journal. 15(4)
- Subjects
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World Kidney Day Joint Steering Committee, educational gap, health literacy, health policy, kidney health, social media, Kidney Disease, Clinical Research, Behavioral and Social Science, Health Services, Patient Safety, Prevention, Renal and urogenital, Generic health relevance, Good Health and Well Being, and Quality Education
- Abstract
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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 caregivers 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 healthcare providers communicating and educating effectively in codesigned partnership with those with kidney disease. For kidney policymakers, health literacy provides the imperative to shift organizations to a culture that places the person at the center of healthcare. 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 healthcare providers and health policymakers. By engaging in and supporting kidney health-centered policymaking, community health planning and health literacy approaches for all, the kidney communities strive to prevent kidney diseases and enable living well with kidney disease.
- Full text View record at eScholarship
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Vogiatzaki, Ekaterini, Michou, Vassiliki, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Roumeliotis, Athanasios, Roumeliotis, Stefanos, Kouidi, Evangelia, and Deligiannis, Asterios
- International Urology and Nephrology. 54(11):2983-2993
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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, Lui, Siu-Fai, and World Kidney Day Joint Steering Committee
- Nephrology, dialysis, transplantation : official publication of the European Dialysis and Transplant Association - European Renal Association. 37(4)
- Subjects
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World Kidney Day Joint Steering Committee, Kidney, Humans, Health Education, Caregivers, Health Personnel, Health Literacy, educational gap, health literacy, health policy, kidney health, social media, empowerment, information technology, partnership, prevention, Patient Safety, Clinical Research, Kidney Disease, Health Services, Prevention, Behavioral and Social Science, Generic health relevance, Renal and urogenital, Quality Education, Good Health and Well Being, Clinical Sciences, and Urology & Nephrology
- Abstract
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The high burden of kidney disease, global disparities in kidney care and poor outcomes of kidney failure bring a concomitant growing burden to those affected, their families, caregivers and the community at large. Health literacy is the degree to which people 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 healthcare providers communicating and educating effectively in a co-designed partnership with those with kidney disease. For kidney policymakers, health literacy provides the imperative to shift organizations to a culture that places the person at the center of healthcare. 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 people's 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 healthcare providers and health policymakers. By engaging in and supporting kidney health-centered policymaking, community health planning and health literacy approaches for all, the kidney communities strive to prevent kidney diseases and enable living well with kidney disease.
- Full text View record at eScholarship
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