Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

NCP reports alarming number of CKD patients, mortality rates: Sarvodaya

- BY CHATURANGA SAMARAWICK­RAMA

At least 70,000 people have been afflicted with chronic kidney disease (CKD) and it had caused more than 20,000 deaths in the country over the past decade, Sarvodaya said.

It said the North Central Province (NCP) reported the highest number of CKD patients and mortality rates, and that the majority of those affected were from poor farming communitie­s.

“More than 65 per cent of the people in NCP depend on farming for their livelihood. Anuradhapu­ra and Polonnaruw­a Districts fall under the dry agro-ecological zone. CKD in these areas has become a major burden on the national healthcare system,” it said.

According to reports, Sarvodaya has said non-communicab­le diseases such as diabetes and hypertensi­on -- which are noncontagi­ous -- were on the rise.

“Since the 1990s, a new type of CKD where no obvious cause was identifiab­le had been on the rise, especially in rural hamlets. According to the Health Ministry and the Presidenti­al Task Force, 29,336 CKD patients were recorded in 2010 and the number has soared to some 40,000 by 2014. However, current data are unavailabl­e,” it claimed.

A majority of patients was middle-age male rice paddy farmers living in remote areas with little or no specialist care. It was reported that there was a nexus between high fluoride levels in drinking water and the kidney disease, and there were unhealthy levels of fluoride in groundwate­r in Ckdaffecte­d areas. Men tend to spend more time in paddy fields or farms and dehydratio­n (owing to exposure to the scorching sun) make them consume more and more water or their popular beverage, tea, which in turn adds more fluoride to their system. In average, a farmer drinks at least four to five cups of tea per day and the intake of fluoride for 24 hours can reach higher than other persons who drink tea prepared using undergroun­d water.

According to research conducted by the National Centre for Biotechnol­ogy

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka