Suriname preparing for the first-ever kidney transplant

Health officials in Suriname are preparing to perform the country’s first kidney transplant this week.

- Advertisement -
CoM Job Fair-728x90

The operations will be carried out by a team led by Dr. Mirza Idu and Professor Dr. Frederike Bemelman from the Netherlands, supported by some medical specialists from the Academic Hospital Paramaribo (AZP).

Recently, Health Minister Amar Ramadhin finalized a cooperation agreement between Amsterdam UMC and Suriname that led to the implementation of the transplant program.

Amsterdam UMC is the largest kidney transplant center in the Netherlands with 17,000 employees.

According to the Ministry of Health, the kidney transplant program is a sustainable model, in which the knowledge will be transferred by the foreign team to Suriname, to enable local doctors to perform the transplants on their own.

In recent years, the number of kidney patients in Suriname has grown rapidly and as a result, there has been an increase in the number of people who are now dependent on dialysis.

A kidney transplant places a healthy kidney from a living or deceased donor into a person whose kidneys no longer function properly.

The main function of the kidneys is to filter and remove waste, minerals, and fluid from the blood by producing urine. When kidneys lose this filtering ability, harmful levels of fluid and waste accumulate in the body, which can raise blood pressure and result in kidney failure (end-stage renal disease). End-stage renal disease occurs when the kidneys have lost about 90 percent of their ability to function normally.

“People with kidney failure have to do dialysis for four hours, three times a week. They have more or less lost their freedom and besides that they are always tired,” said cardiothoracic surgeon Krishna Khargi at the opening of a renal outpatient clinic last year.

- Advertisement -
Uber Free Rides 728x90

The approach to kidney transplants in Suriname is that potential candidates find a donor in their own family, someone who is healthy and willing to donate a kidney.

The number of kidney patients in Suriname is estimated to be between 800 and 900.

More Stories

Jamaica police force JCF

INDECOM probes fatal police shootings as death toll climbs to 37 for April

The Independent Commission of Investigations (INDECOM) has launched probes into four separate incidents involving members of Jamaica’s security forces in which five men were...
Guyana’s President Dr. Mohamed Irfaan Ali

Guyana President voices alarm over Venezuela Essequibo symbol display

Guyana’s President Dr. Irfaan Ali has expressed “grave concern” over the public display of a brooch worn by Venezuela’s Acting President Delcy Rodríguez that...
Andrew Holness Jamaica

PM Holness says contractors must step up to meet 150,000 housing goal

Jamaica's Prime Minister Andrew Holness is urging the development of an enterprise-level contracting sector to support the Government’s target of delivering 150,000 housing solutions...

BVI, Dominican Republic to sign bilateral agreement in June, back deeper regional integration

The British Virgin Islands and the Dominican Republic are set to sign a bilateral agreement in June aimed at strengthening cooperation across key sectors,...

Bartlett targets south coast towns for expansion of ‘edutourism’ in Jamaica

Jamaica's Tourism Minister Edmund Bartlett says several towns along Jamaica’s south coast and surrounding areas are being positioned to tap into growing global demand...

US Coast Guard offloads over $53M in cocaine seized in Caribbean Sea

The U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Escanaba offloaded approximately 7,050 pounds of cocaine valued at more than $53 million on Monday at Port Everglades, following...

Guyana private sector condemns Venezuelan Essequibo imagery during Barbados visit

The Private Sector Commission (PSC) of Guyana has strongly condemned what it described as a “deliberate and provocative display of imagery” by Venezuela’s Acting...
healthcare collapses in Haiti

MSF warns of worsening humanitarian crisis as healthcare collapses in Haiti

Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is warning that Haiti’s humanitarian situation has continued to deteriorate sharply, with escalating violence, collapsing public services, and...
Bank of Jamaica (BOJ)

Jamaica launches search for new Bank of Jamaica Governor

The Government of Jamaica has begun the process of selecting a new governor for the Bank of Jamaica (BOJ), as current governor Richard Byles...

Guyana investigates threat against CANU Director

The Government of Guyana says it is investigating a social media video that appears to contain threats directed at Customs Anti-Narcotics Unit (CANU) Director...

Latest Articles