GET YOUR RED SOCKS ON AND SUPPORT PEOPLE LIVING WITH KIDNEY DISEASE
Kidney Health Red Socks Appeal October 2021
Kidney disease is an insidious and deadly disease that affects 1.7 million (one in ten) Australians and in October 2021 the Kidney Community needs your support.
You can do this by:
Joining a Red Socks Walk on Sunday 10 October 2021 in Melbourne, Brisbane and Adelaide
Registering your Red Socks Virtual Challenge in October and become a Sockstar to show you care
Buying a pair of Red Socks to proudly wear throughout October to raise vital funds to fight kidney disease.
The Kidney Health Australia Red Socks Appeal, kicks off on Friday 1 October to galvanise more Australians into action to understand the impact of the disease on their lives and those close to them, and raise vital funds for early detection activities and support services to alleviate the impact and harm kidney disease causes.
Aussies are being asked to step out in Red Socks in October, either on their own or with friends, and support those living with the daily challenges of this debilitating and deadly disease.
Kidney Health Australia Chief Executive Officer, Chris Forbes said the idea behind the Red Socks Appeal is to recognise the countless hours that people of all ages with kidney failure spend hooked to a life-saving dialysis machine to help clean their body of toxins.
“A little-known fact about kidney disease is that people with kidney failure can spend 60 hours or more a month hooked to a dialysis machine to keep them alive,” Mr Forbes said.
“Dialysis machines basically clean the blood of toxins so it’s filtered out of the body and then returned, and this takes on average five hours at a time, three times a week,” says Mr Forbes. “This process plus the long hours in the chair can leave patients feeling fatigued and quite cold, so a blanket and a warm pair of socks is a must to get them through it.”
“We’d love people to put themselves in the ‘socks’ of someone living with kidney disease and run, ride, walk, hop, skip or dance their way through October to raise money for our courageous kidney community,” Mr Forbes said.
Money raised from the Red Socks Appeal will fund critical support services such as the Kidney Helpline, Kidney Kids and Youth Program, Transplant House and the Big Red Kidney Bus.
Of the 1.7 million Australians affected by kidney disease, 1.5 million are unaware they are living with the early signs of the disease.
“The shocking fact about kidney disease is that a person can lose up to 90% of their kidney function before any symptoms are apparent,” Mr Forbes said.
“A person could be relatively fine one day and the next they could be in hospital facing a life sentence of continuous dialysis or on a transplant list, waiting for a suitable kidney donor.”
“We need to prevent people reaching this point, so the Red Socks Appeal is also a great opportunity to raise more awareness around the impact this disease has on people’s lives and that of their families and drive early detection,” Mr Forbes said.
“In this age of COVID-19, we’ve made sure the event has something for everyone – if people can’t get out to raise money, they can still wear Red Socks and support us in their living rooms and on social media – this is a community event that everyone can get behind,” Mr Forbes said.
To find out more and register for the Kidney Health Red Socks Appeal, visit kidney.org.au/redsocksappeal
[1] Australian Bureau of Statistics 2013. Australian Health Survey: Biomedical Results for Chronic Diseases, 2011-12. Canberra: ABS. www.abs.gov.au/australianhealthsurvey
ABOUT KIDNEY HEALTH AUSTRALIA
Kidney Health Australia is a not-for-profit and the peak body for kidney health in Australia with the aim to protect 5 million at risk Australians from developing end stage kidney disease, and to save and improve the lives of people already affected by the disease through support services and funding crucial research.
To find out more visit www.kidney.org.au
Kidney Health Facts
Kidneys are essential to a person’s health and wellbeing. They rid your body of waste (through urine), clean your blood of waste and toxins, regulate your blood pressure and manage the production of Vitamin D – essential to strong bones, muscles and overall health!
The biggest risk factors for kidney disease are diabetes, high blood pressure, established heart problems and/or stroke, family history of kidney failure, smoking, obesity, being 60 years or older, of Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander origin, or a history of acute kidney injury. To check your risk visit www.kidney.org.au/kidneyrisktest
About 63 people die with kidney-related disease everyday
Kidney disease is a silent killer - sufferers can lose 90% of kidney function without experiencing any symptoms
1 in 3 people in Australia are at risk of developing chronic kidney disease
A staggering 1.7 million Australian adults are affected by kidney disease while 1.5 million of those are unaware of it
Kidney-related disease kills more people than breast cancer, prostate cancer and road accidents
One in five Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples have indicators of chronic kidney disease and are almost four times more likely to die from it than the non-Indigenous population.