A history of the International Pediatric Nephrology Association (IPNA)
-
Upload
aaron-friedman -
Category
Documents
-
view
215 -
download
0
Transcript of A history of the International Pediatric Nephrology Association (IPNA)
EDITORIAL COMMENTARY
A history of the International Pediatric NephrologyAssociation (IPNA)
Aaron Friedman & Jochen Ehrich & Robert Chevalier &
Sally Jones
Received: 20 July 2011 /Accepted: 10 February 2012 /Published online: 6 March 2012# IPNA 2012
Managing care of children of the world with kidney diseasesrequires balancing clinical aims, research findings andsocio-economic goals within an international environmentcharacterized by cultural and economic complexity and alarge disparity in the availability, affordability and accessi-bility of renal care. Since 1974, the International PediatricNephrology Association (IPNA) has been trying to establishthis balance, involving almost two generations of pediatricnephrologists. This report explores IPNA’s evolution anddescribes the founding generation of pioneers, the ratificationof a constitution and the formulation of clinical aims as well asestablishment of the journal of Pediatric Nephrology. Thisreport also examines the highlights of the IPNA congressesand the training and teaching courses at each stage of devel-opment. It provides a brief history of the development ofregional societies.
The first 10 years of the IPNAwas the founding era, withsmall numbers of members, moderate research productivityand a tremendously efficient and friendly interaction
between members that promoted communication amongcenters of the world. Achieving the goal of IPNA, namely,enhancing the treatment of children with kidney disease,wherever in the world they may need it, relied on threeprincipal elements: a serviceable fund of knowledge, a co-hort of engaged professionals and a broad geographicalreach.
A 20-year period of expansion followed, made possibleby the rapid expansion of diagnostic and therapeutic facilities.With information technology reaching throughout the worldin the last 10 years, IPNA embarked on teaching and trainingcourses as well as on establishing fellowship programs foryoung practitioners in Africa, Asia and Latin America to assisttheir efforts to develop pediatric nephrology on their homeground.
IPNA and IPNA associate organizations (AFPNA,ALANEPE, ANZPNA, ASPN, AsPNA, ESPN and JSPN)have reached a high level of international communication,cooperation and consensus to further the care of children withkidney diseases.
The history manuscript completed in 2010 should beviewed as a beginning. The manuscript should not be seenas comprehensive but rather as a concise history aimed atcapturing important events and spurring others in the Societyto help compile even more of our past. IPNA leadershipviewed as important the need to capture the wisdom of thefounders of IPNA and to inform the IPNA membership of thedriving vision and the path the organization has taken.
We hope this beginning will serve as an impetus forthe membership, now and in the future, to build on thishistory and to maintain a record of IPNA’s progress andaccomplishments.
The history can be viewed at http://www.ipna-online.org/about/history/
A. Friedman (*)Medical School Dean’s Office, University of Minnesota,420 Delaware Street SE,Minneapolis, MN 55455, USAe-mail: [email protected]
J. EhrichMedizinischen Hochschule, Kinderklinik,Hannover, Germany
R. ChevalierDepartment of Pediatrics, University of Virginia,Charlottesville, VA, USA
S. JonesMinneapolis, MN 01038, USA
Pediatr Nephrol (2012) 27:695DOI 10.1007/s00467-012-2134-8