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Queen Elizabeth Hospital Kidney Patients' Association
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IMPORTANT NOTICES: ** Corona Virus **  Flu Vaccinations Renal Patient Transport 


IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT

NEW EDITION OF KIDNEYMATTERS.

NOVEMBER 2025

PLEASE GO TO NEWS LETTER

News Letters - KidneyMatters November 2025--- News Letters Page.

The Vaccines are safe for all Renal Patients

Please go to CORONA VIRUS for details.


INTERESTING ITEMS ON OTHER PAGES.


Go to News Lettres November 2025.
There is a Q.R. code which will take you to the Renal Information on the U.H.B. Website

New Video for young Patients transferring from
The Children Hospital to the Queen Elizabeth Hospital.

Go To:- "Patient Info" and click "Young Person Info"

There is a new set of 5 videos to help patients making a choice about types of Peritoneal Dialysis

Please go to "TREATMENTS" to view them.

Letter from the Chairman --- See News Page

New ideas for healthy eating --- Dietary Info Page.









New pages on www.kidneymatters.co.uk Please take a look




If you go to "Fundraising" you will find all the details to set up a sponsored event. Under "Fundraisers" there will be a list of all those who have events raising funds for us. We hope that this will encourage you to have a go.

The event can be anything you like, a Fun Run, swim, walk, climb, sponsored weight loss or donations to mark a special occasion.

Thank you for supporting the Queen Elizabeth Hospital Kidney Patients' Association




Local News

Festive Food and Drink for Parties
Do not forget to look on the Dietary information for details of
Festive Foods and Drinks.
There is also a Christmas Cake recipe for those on dialysis.
All the information is provided by
The Renal Dietitians at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital.

Kidney Matters the News letter for Renal Patients at the Queen Elizabeth
Kidney Matters is the newsletter for the K.P.A. and is sent to all renal patients on C.A.P.D.or haemodialysis, transplant and pre dialysis, who are receiving treatment at the Q.E. or the satellite units.

The newsletter is paid for from the funds that the K.P.A. raise during the year. The purpose of KIDNEY MATTERS is to keep patients and carers informed as to the work of the K.P.A., provide information to patients on different topics, which we hope will be of interest and to provide a link for patients who may feel very isolated due to their condition.

We would welcome your comments and ideas on how we may expand and improve on this and continue to help the 2300 plus patients with renal problems treated at the Q.E.

If anyone would like to contribute an article to the newsletter or the web page please send it in to the Editor. It could be about how you organised a holiday, Ideas on dealing with the condition of renal failure, coping with going back to work, success stories about receiving transplants, and how it changed your life. This would give hope to others who may feel very low at times and that the future looks bleak.

If you send your thoughts to the Editor the address is on the back page of the newsletter or on the contacts page, we will include them in future editions.

The Newsletter is posted to all patients three times a year.

Copies are in each of the dialysis units: Aston, Great Bridge, Smethwick, Hereford, Kings Norton, Sparkhill, Woodgate Valley, Worcester, Redditch, LLandrindod Wells and the R.D.U. at the Q.E. for patients to collect.
PLEASE look out for them.
Thanks for your support.

Renal Patient Information from the Q.E.
If you go to the section "patient information" you will find a list of patient information leaflets.
These have been produced by the Hospital they are free to download or you can obtain copies of them from the renal unit.
We hope you find them useful.
All the information is produced by the Queen Elizabeth Hospital Renal Department.

Google
Daily update 6 December 2025
NEWS
Dehydration, infection, certain painkillers called nonsteroidal anti inflammatory drugs and heavy exercise can raise creatinine temporarily.
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A new study published in the American Journal of Physiology - Heart and Circulatory Physiology reveals that chronic kidney disease (CKD) ...
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A groundbreaking discovery offers hope for reversing kidney damage, challenging the notion that it's irreversible. Researchers found that blocking ...
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In multivariable adjusted model, no association seen for impaired kidney function with increased hazard of dementia compared with preserved kidney ...
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A large study found that people with impaired kidneys tend to have higher Alzheimer's biomarkers, yet they don't face a higher overall risk of ...
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A medical student in New York volunteered in class to have an ultrasound, which showed a large mass on her right kidney.
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The decline is primarily due to damage to the "heart-brain link" triggered by chronic kidney illness, the study said.
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Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a devastating complication of acute illness that affects adults and children across multiple settings worldwide and ...
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"Developing new therapies and treatments for CKD can help prevent or put off more drastic treatments—like dialysis or transplantation..."
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Aria Moreno is a medical school student who now also happens to believe firmly in the power of fate. “I saved an organ essentially by volunteering ...
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