That Girl Needs A Kidney: Malkia S. White

That Girl Needs A Kidney: Malkia S. White provides information about the reality of renal failure & promotes kidney care.

Donate Life Living Donor Day is a celebration during   that honors living organ and tissue donors for saving and healing...
04/02/2026

Donate Life Living Donor Day is a celebration during that honors living organ and tissue donors for saving and healing lives!

National Donate Life Living Donor Day is celebrated annually on the first Wednesday of April.

In 2024, more than 7,000 people made the decision to give one of their kidneys or a part of their liver to someone waiting for a second chance at life. Others gave the healing gift of birth tissue. Birth tissue includes tissues such as placenta and amniotic membrane. Grafts derived from birth tissue promote natural wound healing.

Resources & Photo Credits: Donate Life America

National Donate Life Month (NDLM) was established by Donate Life America and its partnering organizations in 2003. Obser...
04/02/2026

National Donate Life Month (NDLM) was established by Donate Life America and its partnering organizations in 2003. Observed in April each year, National Donate Life Month helps raise awareness about donation, encourages Americans to register as organ, eye and tissue donors and honors those who have saved lives through the gift of donation.

Leave a Legacy

This month, we honor the people who have given the gift of life through organ, eye and tissue donation. We also celebrate the lives that have been saved and healed because of a donor’s generosity.

This year’s theme uses trees as a symbol of life and connection. Just like trees grow and support each other in a forest, donation connects people – donors, recipients, and their families. Like a tree that grows and stands for generations, a donor’s gift leaves a lasting legacy of hope and life.

Your decision to be an organ, eye and tissue donor gives hope to the 100,000 people on the national organ transplant waiting list who are waiting for a second chance at life.

During National Donate Life Month (NDLM) and throughout the year, help save and heal lives by: registering your decision to be an organ, eye and tissue donor, learning more about living donation, and supporting the Donate Life cause.

Resource & Photo Credit: Donate Life America

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In 2026, World Kidney Day celebrates its 20th anniversary, marking two decades of global action to raise awareness about...
03/12/2026

In 2026, World Kidney Day celebrates its 20th anniversary, marking two decades of global action to raise awareness about kidney health. In a significant milestone, World Kidney Day was officially recognized by the World Health Organization (WHO) in 2025, underscoring its role in addressing kidney disease worldwide.

The 2026 World Kidney Day campaign image features the yearly campaign theme, "Kidney Health for All: Caring for People, Protecting the Planet" with visual elements representing the importance of kidney care that protects both kidney and planetary health.

Today, Thursday, March 12, 2026, the global community will unite under the theme: "Kidney Health For All: Caring for People, Protecting the Planet".

This year's campaign highlights the growing connection between kidney health and planetary health. Environmental threats – including air pollution, heat stress, dehydration, and extreme weather – increase the risk and progression of kidney disease. Meanwhile, resource-intensive treatments such as dialysis consume large amounts of water, energy, and single-use plastics. Healthcare systems must work toward greener, sustainable kidney care. However, prevention and early detection remain the most powerful ways to protect people and the planet.

"As the global burden of kidney disease rises, driven by diabetes, hypertension, and environmental pressures, World Kidney Day 2026 is a powerful call to action," emphasized Dina Abdellatif, Co-Chair of the World Kidney Day Joint Steering Committee, on behalf of the IFKF-WKA. "We must empower people, strengthen prevention and early detection, and build equitable, high-quality health systems while safeguarding our planet and future generations."

Frequently called a "silent disease," kidney disease often shows no symptoms until advanced stages, yet it can be prevented through early detection and proper management of risk factors such as diabetes, high blood pressure, and obesity.

"Kidney disease is among the top ten causes of death from noncommunicable diseases, yet it remains underrecognized," added Li-Li Hsiao, Co-Chair of the World Kidney Day Joint Steering Committee, on behalf of the International Society of Nephrology (ISN). "Our mission is clear: raise awareness, promote early detection, and prioritize prevention on World Kidney Day and beyond."

Resource & Photo Credit: World Kidney Day



March is National Kidney Month.Today, I can say “I live with a history of IgA Nephropathy” because I received a deceased...
03/03/2026

March is National Kidney Month.

Today, I can say “I live with a history of IgA Nephropathy” because I received a deceased-donor kidney transplant in 2021.

This never-ending journey is not always easy, but education and community make a monumental difference.

If you are newly diagnosed, you are not alone.

If you are supporting someone with IgAN, your presence matters.

Awareness leads to progress. Progress leads us closer to a cure.

03/02/2026

DYK: “850 million people in the world have kidney disease. Yet, few are aware of its dangers.”

Learn more about the importance of kidney care and participate in these Kidney Community events.

Resources: American Society of Nephrology, American Kidney Fund, National Kidney Foundation - Kansas, Missouri, and Arkansas, Department of Medicine, Columbia University Irving Medical Center, World Kidney Day



03/02/2026

March is National Kidney Month!

CKD in the United States

• An estimated 35.5 million Americans have kidney disease.

• About 815,000 Americans are living with kidney failure.

• Nearly 555,000 Americans are on dialysis.

• Kidney disease is growing at an alarming rate. It currently affects more than 1 in 7, or 14%, of American adults, with people of color at greater risk for kidney failure.

• There were about 131,000 Americans newly diagnosed with kidney failure in 2022 (the most recent data available).

• 9 out of 10 people with kidney disease are unaware they have it, and 1 in 3 of those with severely reduced kidney function (but not yet on dialysis) are unaware they have kidney disease.

Resource: American Kidney Fund

03/01/2026

It’s !

I was diagnosed with a rare kidney disease at the age of 6.

Today and everyday I celebrate being a 45-year survivor of IgA nephropathy (IGAN).

Learn more about IGAN: American Kidney Fund IgA Nephropathy Foundation National Kidney Foundation NephCure National Organization for Rare Disorders, Inc. (NORD)





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