As a urological surgeon, I regularly treat patients with chronic kidney disease. In severe cases, kidneys fail completely, causing toxic waste buildup that requires dialysis or transplants. These treatments save lives, but growing demand strains the system.
Dialysis Crisis Looms in Australia
Dialysis rates are projected to rise nearly 86% by 2032 compared to 2022 levels. Many units nationwide exceed capacity, forcing patients to wait two to three years for transplants. Healthcare providers operate at full stretch managing kidney patients.
Early detection and intervention offer the best solution for patients and the system alike. Kidney Health Australia outlines a clear strategy to achieve this.
The Heavy Toll of Kidney Disease
One in seven Australian adults shows signs of chronic kidney disease, often undiagnosed. Three-quarters have risk factors like diabetes or hypertension. The condition heightens risks of heart attacks, strokes, and early death, costing the nation A$9.9 billion annually.
Key Roles of the Kidneys
These fist-sized organs, located at the abdomen’s rear, filter waste and excess fluid from blood to form urine. They produce hormones aiding red blood cell formation and bone health while balancing salts and minerals to control blood pressure.
Common Triggers of Kidney Damage
High blood sugar and hypertension harm kidney vessels and nephrons, impairing filtration. Other factors contribute to silent progression.
Kidney Disease Often Strikes Without Warning
Known as a “silent” illness, kidneys can lose 90% function before symptoms emerge: fatigue, leg/ankle swelling, persistent hypertension, shortness of breath, frequent nighttime urination, and foamy urine. Damage proves largely irreversible at this point, underscoring prevention’s importance.
Practical Steps to Safeguard Kidneys
Consult your GP to ensure:
- Blood pressure stays controlled
- Diabetes management remains optimal
- Weight stays healthy
- Diet limits salt
- No smoking
- Regular exercise
- Adequate hydration
- Avoid prolonged NSAID use like ibuprofen
Push for Routine Kidney Health Checks
General practitioners should screen high-risk groups every one to two years: those with diabetes, hypertension, heart disease, obesity; First Nations individuals; smokers or vapers; family history cases; and people over 60.
Checks involve blood pressure measurement, blood tests for function, and urine analysis for protein. Early action could avert over 38,000 premature deaths, add 165,000 healthy life years, and yield $45 savings per $1 invested over 20 years.
Prevention Beats Treatment Every Time
Patients often arrive with advanced, irreversible damage. Yet preventable causes like hypertension and diabetes dominate. Heightened awareness, basic screenings, and prompt intervention can halt progression to failure for countless Australians.

