New lease of life for recovered Covid-19 patient in Singapore after kidney transplant

SINGAPORE - Madam Ong Bee Ai was overjoyed when the Singapore General Hospital (SGH) told her in April last year (2020) that she was finally receiving a kidney transplant after a four-year wait. But the hawker's joy turned to devastation when SGH later informed her she was unable to have the transplant after a Covid-19 swab test revealed she had contracted the virus. Madam Ong, now 52, who used to run marathons and practise taekwondo, felt like her life had collapsed when she found out in 2016 that she had IgA nephropathy, a condition that left her with just 5 per cent kidney function. This meant her kidneys were limited in their ability to clear waste and regulate the water balance in her body. As a result, Madam Ong had water retention and vomited often; her weight plummeted from 58kg to a mere 38kg. She needed to undergo dialysis thrice a week, with the treatments costing $3,000 a month. A kidney transplant would improve her quality of life, but she was able to undergo surgery only in January this year after she recovered from Covid-19. Dr Ho Quan Yao, a consultant at SGH's department of renal medicine, explained that after a kidney transplant, patients have to take medication t...

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NKF launches new initiative to raise awareness of kidney health

SINGAPORE - The National Kidney Foundation (NKF) launched a new initiative on Saturday (Jan 9) to encourage people to undertake projects raising awareness of kidney health and to reduce the number of kidney-related diseases. Known as the Kidney We Care Movement, the initiative was launched in the light of the rising number of kidney failure cases in Singapore, with 5.5 new daily cases needing dialysis or kidney transplant for survival. For the past five years, NKF has admitted a yearly average of 855 new dialysis patients, and spent $116 million in its last financial year to treat kidney failure. Currently, Singapore has more than 8,000 patients on dialysis, with around two-thirds under the care of NKF. Kidney failure is mainly caused by diabetes and hypertension, and Singapore has one of the highest rates in the world for diabetes-related kidney failure. The number of diabetes cases is projected to grow to one million by 2050 if more preventive measures are not taken. As such, the Kidney We Care Movement will focus on three aspects: Project 5.5, which will aim to reduce the number of kidney failure cases, and related diseases like diabetes and hypertension; Project Hope, which wil...