National Kidney Month during March is a reminder to give our kidneys a check up. 1 in 3 Americans are at high risk for kidney disease because of diabetes, high blood pressure, or family history of kidney failure. On top of that, 30 million Americans already have kidney disease, and many of them are not aware of it because symptoms usually don’t show until the disease has progressed.
Our kidneys are crucial for 3 main reasons. They regulate water, they remove waste and regulate minerals, and they produce hormones. Located in our lower back, these two hard-working organs also filter 200 liters of blood a day! Keeping our kidneys healthy is vital to a long and productive life.
HISTORY
National Kidney Foundation supports National Kidney Month.
More….
- World Stroke Day
- World Diabetes Day
- National Wear Red Day
- National Teal Talk Day
- American Diabetes Association Alert Day
- Anosmia Awareness Day
- National Sudden Cardiac Arrest Awareness Month
- American Hearth Month
- National Stroke Awareness Month
- National Blood Pressure Month
- National Trisomy Awareness Month
- National Brain Injury Awareness Month
- National Nephrology Nurses Week
- National Kidney Health Month
- World Kidney Day
- National Donor Day
- National Diabetes Day
- National Blood Pressure Education Month
- Nation Nutrition Month
- National Heart Month
- National Mental Health Month
- National Fasting Month
- National Blood Donor Month
- National COPD Awareness Month
HOW TO OBSERVE
Learn more about caring for your kidneys at www.kidney.org and use #NationalKidneyMonth to share on social media. Schedule a checkup, and learn what symptoms to keep an eye out for to know if your kidneys are starting to fail or become infected. Here’s what else you can do this month to protect your kidneys:
- Control your blood pressure (and diabetes if you have it.) These are the two leading causes of kidney disease and kidney failure.
- Exercise often. Regular exercise keeps your kidneys healthy by keeping things moving and controlling blood pressure.
- Cut out processed foods. They tend to be big sources of sodium, nitrates, and phosphates, and they’ve been linked to kidney disease.
- Try to reduce over the counter pain medicines. They may help with aches and pains, but they can greatly damage your kidneys.
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