Kidney Foundation says it’s time for a National Chronic Kidney Disease Framework
MONTREAL, November 18, 2025–(BUSINESS WIRE)–A new analysis from the Global Burden of Disease Study published in The Lancet in November 20251, shows that the impact of chronic kidney disease (CKD) has substantially increased over the past three decades. In particular, Canada’s CKD mortality rate rose by more than 70% since 1990 according to Dr. Marcello Tonelli, University of Calgary medical professor and International Society of Nephrology (ISN) President.
“This is markedly higher than the global average, and higher than many other high-income countries. Because the increase was adjusted for population growth and population aging, it represents a true worsening in outcomes,” Dr. Tonelli said. “The new data is a wake-up call for Canada,” continued Dr. Tonelli. “The rising mortality despite stable prevalence strongly suggests there are missed opportunities for early detection and timely treatment among Canadians who develop CKD.”
To tackle CKD, a national strategy is needed as Canadians and health systems can no longer afford to wait. The Kidney Foundation of Canada is developing a Framework for release in Spring 2026 to address critical disparities in awareness, prevention, diagnosis, and care access. The Foundation has actively consulted with leading clinicians, patients, and members of at-risk communities – as well as provincial health systems and leaders – to inform the Framework with an emphasis on early diagnosis and timely intervention.
“Other countries have developed national strategies for CKD, including Australia and the United States,” said Elizabeth Myles, National Executive Director of The Kidney Foundation of Canada. “Canadian patients and those at risk of kidney disease cannot be left behind by a lack of action,” said Ms. Myles. “Improvements made in chronic disease management in Canada for other conditions, such as diabetes, have clearly shown that national action plans are essential for the prevention and control of diseases like CKD.”
Access to care in the earliest stages of kidney disease can prevent kidney failure and its consequences, including significant health care costs, which are in the tens of billions of dollars for CKD. Systemic changes would have an immeasurable positive impact on quality of life for those directly affected by kidney disease, while significantly reducing health care costs.
“The time is now for the adoption of a government-led national kidney strategy to coordinate early detection, enhance kidney health surveillance, and ensure equitable access to care at all stages of the disease,” said Carrie Thibodeau, Kidney Foundation National Director of Programs and Public Policy. “Our strategy includes a requirement for care to be complemented by robust data collection and analysis to support evidence-based policy.”
link

More Stories
Russia turns to high altitude balloons after Starlink restrictions disrupt battlefield communications across Russian-controlled territories
What CES 2026 didn’t show: The quiet crisis in wireless capacity nobody is talking about
Recent AWS issues blamed on AI tools – at least two incidents affected some Amazon services