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Why Kidney Disease is Called a “Silent Killer” in India

6th January 2026Mayank SharmaBlogUncategorised
Why Kidney Disease is Called a “Silent Killer” in India

Last month, a 42-year-old IT professional walked into our clinic complaining of persistent fatigue. He thought it was work stress. His blood reports revealed something far more serious—his kidneys were functioning at just 25% capacity. He had advanced chronic kidney disease, and he had no idea.

This isn’t a rare story. Across India, millions are living with damaged kidneys without knowing it. That’s exactly why kidney disease has earned the frightening title of “silent killer.”

The Dangerous Silence of Kidney Disease

Your kidneys are remarkable organs. Even when they’re losing function, they continue working without raising an alarm. Unlike a heart attack that announces itself with chest pain, or diabetes that shows up with excessive thirst, kidney disease quietly progresses in the background.

Here’s the troubling reality: Most people don’t experience noticeable symptoms until their kidneys have lost 60-70% of their function. By this stage, the damage is often irreversible, and patients need dialysis or transplant to survive.

In medical terms, we call this the “asymptomatic phase”—a period where your kidneys are deteriorating, but your body sends no warning signals. This silent progression is what makes kidney disease so dangerous.

The Alarming Numbers from India

The statistics paint a worrying picture. According to a comprehensive study published in The Lancet (2020), over 17% of India’s adult population shows signs of chronic kidney disease1. That’s roughly 1 in 6 adults. Yet, research from the Indian Journal of Nephrology indicates that less than 10% of these individuals are aware they have it.

In North India, particularly in states like Uttar Pradesh, Delhi, Punjab, and Haryana, the prevalence is even higher due to lifestyle factors, diabetes, and hypertension. According to data from the Indian Society of Nephrology, approximately 2.2 lakh new patients in India reach end-stage kidney disease requiring dialysis or transplant every year.

The tragedy? Many of these cases could have been prevented or slowed down with early detection and proper management.

chronic kidney disease awareness
chronic kidney disease awareness

Why Don’t People Notice?

Your kidneys have an extraordinary ability to compensate. When one part is damaged, the healthy portions work overtime to maintain your body’s balance. This compensation mechanism is both a blessing and a curse—it keeps you feeling normal while the disease silently advances.

Additionally, early kidney disease symptoms like mild fatigue, slight changes in urination frequency, or occasional swelling are easy to dismiss. We blame it on aging, stress, or poor sleep. We don’t think “kidney problem.”

The Indian Context Makes It Worse

Several factors unique to India amplify this silent crisis:

Late diagnosis culture: Many Indians avoid routine health check-ups, preferring to visit doctors only when symptoms become unbearable. By then, kidney disease has often progressed significantly.

Diabetes and hypertension epidemic: India has over 77 million diabetics and a similar number of people with uncontrolled blood pressure—both are leading causes of kidney disease. Many don’t manage these conditions properly, allowing kidney damage to occur unnoticed.

Lack of awareness: Unlike heart disease or cancer, kidney disease doesn’t receive the same public health attention. Most people don’t know what kidney disease symptoms look like or who is at risk.

Financial barriers: Even when people suspect something is wrong, the fear of medical expenses prevents them from getting tested. Ironically, early detection and treatment cost a fraction of what dialysis or transplant eventually requires.

Breaking the Silence: What You Can Do

The good news? Kidney disease is highly detectable with simple blood and urine tests. A basic kidney function test measuring creatinine, eGFR (estimated Glomerular Filtration Rate), and urine albumin can reveal problems years before symptoms appear.

You should get tested if you:

  • Are over 40 years old
  • Have diabetes or high blood pressure
  • Have a family history of kidney disease
  • Are you overweight or obese
  • Have heart disease
  • Smoke or use tobacco products
  • Take painkillers regularly

Early detection means early intervention. With proper medication, dietary changes, and lifestyle modifications, we can slow or even halt the progression of kidney disease. But this only works if you catch it before silence turns into crisis.

Your Kidneys Deserve Attention

Don’t wait for symptoms to appear. By the time kidney disease announces itself with clear signs, you may have already lost most of your kidney function. Annual health check-ups aren’t luxuries—they’re necessities, especially if you’re in a risk category.

Your kidneys filter your entire blood volume dozens of times daily, removing waste, balancing fluids, and regulating vital functions. They deserve the same preventive care you give your heart or your blood sugar.

Why Kidney Disease is Called a Silent Killer in India
Why Kidney Disease is Called a Silent Killer in India

Share Your Story With Us

Have you or a loved one experienced kidney disease? We’d love to hear your journey—the early signs you noticed, challenges you faced, or how early detection helped you. Your story could save someone’s kidneys and potentially their life.

Connect with us through Kidney Support Network. We’re building a community of kidney health warriors, and your experience matters. Selected stories may be featured in our Hindi podcast or educational workshops, helping thousands across North India learn from real experiences.

Take Action Today

If you haven’t had a kidney function test in the past year and you’re over 40 or have risk factors, schedule one this week. A simple blood test could be the difference between healthy kidneys and a lifetime of dialysis.

At 7Med India, our 19 dialysis centers across North India see hundreds of patients every week—many wish they had known about their kidney disease earlier. At Epitome Kidney Urology Institute, our nephrology team specializes in early detection and intervention programs.

Don’t let kidney disease remain silent in your body. Make some noise—get tested, stay informed, and protect your kidneys before it’s too late.

REFERENCES

  • The Lancet Global Health (2020). “The Global Burden of Chronic Kidney Disease” – https://www.thelancet.com/journals/langlo/article/PIIS2214-109X(20)30003-3/fulltext
  • Agarwal SK, Srivastava RK. “Chronic Kidney Disease in India: Challenges and Solutions.” Indian Journal of Nephrology. 2018;28(4):247-249. – https://www.indianjournalofnephrology.org
  • Indian Society of Nephrology. “CKDRI – Chronic Kidney Disease Registry of India.” 2020 Annual Report. – https://www.indiansocietyofnephrology.org
  • International Diabetes Federation. “IDF Diabetes Atlas – India.” 2021. – https://diabetesatlas.org

Source: “Why Kidney Disease Is Called a Silent Killer in India” originally published on Epitome Hospitals website on 22 December 2025 — the original article can be read at: https://www.epitomehospitals.com/blog/why-kidney-disease-is-called-a-silent-killer-in-india/

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How to Choose the Right Dialysis Centre in Delhi NCR (And Avoid Costly Mistakes)

10th December 2025Mayank SharmaBlogdialysis center in delhiDialysis centre
How to Choose the Right Dialysis Centre in Delhi NCR (And Avoid Costly Mistakes)

Last month, a 52-year-old patient walked into the Dialysis Centre at Epitome Kidney Urology Institute with a severe infection. He’d been on dialysis for eight months at a dialysis centre in Delhi. Upon examination, our medical team found that his dialysis access site was inflamed, he had recurring fevers, and his recent blood reports showed alarming signs of infection.

“Hame laga dialysis to dialysis hi hai kisi bhi clinic mein karao, Pani hi to nikalwana hota hai,” he told our Nephrologist, his voice tired and defeated. “Hamare ghar ke sabse paas jo hospital tha wahi dialysis kara rahe the.”

(I thought dialysis is just a simple procedure to get extra fluid/water removed. There is a dialysis facility in a hospital near our home, so we were getting dialysis there itself.)

That decision almost cost him his life.

After nearly one and a half decades of running dialysis clinics across North India through 7Med India and now providing full-fledged kidney care, including Kidney Transplant at Epitome Hospital, I’ve seen this story play out too many times. Patients assume dialysis is just a simple process of removing fluid/urine, which is not the whole truth. They assume that every center follows the same protocols, uses the same quality standards, and delivers the same outcomes.

They’re dangerously wrong.

The dialysis center you choose isn’t just about convenience or cost. It’s literally a matter of life and death. Patients can face numerous issues like infections and toxicity in the bloodstream due to poor water quality, sero-conversion and other life-threatening infections due to poor sterility and hand hygiene. Lack of attentive staff and inadequate monitoring can lead to missed warning signs which, at times, can be fatal.

And the quality gap between a dialysis clinic near your home and the best in the city can be wider than ever.

The Hidden Dangers of the Wrong Choice

After kidney failure, dialysis becomes your lifeline—filtering waste and excess fluid from your blood two to three times a week, every week, potentially for the rest of your life. But what most patients don’t realize is that the quality of that filtration depends mostly on factors they can’t see.

Let’s See What You Must Look For (Before It’s Too Late)

Choosing a dialysis center isn’t like picking a restaurant. You can’t rely just on Google reviews alone. Below are the non-negotiables I recommend every patient should look for while choosing a dialysis clinic:

1. Water Testing Reports

Ask for recent water testing reports. Any quality-focused centre should test water quality regularly and comply with AAMI (American Standard For Dialysis Water) or EU (European Standard For Dialysis Water) standards, or our own Indian standards recommended by ISN (Indian Society of Nephrology). If the dialysis staff hesitates to show you these reports or avoids sharing them, consider it a big red flag.

The water quality defines everything else. Don’t compromise on it.

2. Dialyzer Reuse Protocols

Find out if the center reuses dialyzers and, if so, what protocols they follow. Specifically ask:

  • Do they have an automated dialyzer reprocessing machine?
  • How many times is each dialyzer typically reused?
  • How do they determine when a dialyzer should no longer be used?

Without automated reprocessing, there’s no reliable quality control. Manual cleaning and testing leave too much room for human error.

3. Staffing and Staff Training

The dialysis technician-to-patient ratio matters tremendously. International standards recommend one trained dialysis nurse for every four to five patients. Ask about staff credentials—are they trained dialysis technicians or general nursing staff?

A well-trained, adequately staffed center can identify and address complications before they become emergencies.

4. Nephrologist Presence and Accessibility

In India, it’s practically not possible to have a Nephrologist at every dialysis center, thus if the dialysis clinic is covered by a doctor and supervised by a Nephrologist, that should be fine. The target for a patient should be to do regular consultations with the treating Nephrologist, and the dialysis clinic should also be regularly visited by a Nephrologist to do an overall review of clinical protocols.

On this front, single-specialty dialysis chains like 7Med and hospitals focused on kidney care like Epitome Kidney Urology Institute do much better comparatively.

At our 7Med clinics and at Epitome, we ensure nephrologist oversight because we’ve learned—often the hard way—that minutes matter in dialysis emergencies.

5. Quality & Infection Control Protocols

Ask about their infection control measures. How often are machines disinfected (after each dialysis or once a day)? What protocols do they follow for vascular access care? Do they segregate patients with infections? What’s their track record with dialysis-related infections?

These aren’t invasive questions—they’re your right as a patient whose life depends on these answers.

A good indicator of quality in today’s environment are accreditations. Accreditations from NABH, QCI, etc., guarantee that the dialysis clinic follows industry-standard quality protocols which are audited regularly by a third party independently.

6. Location and Consistency

While quality trumps convenience, you also need to think practically. You’ll be coming to this center three times a week, potentially for years. Is it accessible? Can you maintain that schedule during the monsoons, Delhi’s infamous traffic jams, or when your own health fluctuates?

More importantly, can the center accommodate you consistently? Nothing disrupts care more than constantly shifting between centers because your “home” facility can’t guarantee you a slot.

7. Insurance Panels

Dialysis is a costly affair. Dialysis patients end up paying close to 20-30 thousand rupees just for dialysis. Add in the medication costs, diagnostic tests, and doctor consultation costs, which can take this amount anywhere up to 40 to 50 thousand rupees. Thus, identifying a dialysis clinic which is empanelled with the insurance company you are insured with will help you significantly.

In case you don’t find a hospital or dialysis clinic empanelled with your insurer, you don’t need to get discouraged or compromise on your choice of dialysis clinic. Talk to the dialysis provider, and they will help you understand and navigate the reimbursement process.

People meeting certain criteria may be covered under PMJAY (Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana) or Ayushman Bharat Yojana—check your eligibility with the hospital.

The Delhi NCR Dialysis Landscape

Delhi NCR has seen explosive growth in dialysis centers over the past decade. Government initiatives like Ayushman Bharat and the National Dialysis Program have made treatment more accessible—which is wonderful. But accessibility means nothing without quality.

The challenge for patients is that not all centers are created on quality parameters. Some are run by experienced nephrologists with decades of kidney care expertise. Others are commercial ventures where dialysis is just another revenue stream, managed by administrators who’ve never actually cared for a kidney failure patient.

I strongly recommend patients to stay away from dialysis clinics which are operated by a dialysis technician and not a proper hospital or organizations dedicated to providing dialysis like 7Med India.

At 7Med India, we’ve built our network of 20 dialysis clinics across 14 cities with one non-negotiable principle: PATIENT FIRST. Not just that, we have taken our commitment to kidney patients to the next level by establishing institutes like Epitome Kidney Urology Institute which provide holistic kidney care including kidney transplants, not just dialysis. Not to forget that our clinical programs are governed by preeminent Nephrologists like Dr. Vijay Kher, Chairman of Epitome Kidney Urology Institute, and Dr. Ajay Kher, Group Medical Director.

We don’t just provide dialysis—we help our patients understand their condition, participate in their care decisions, and recognize warning signs that need attention.

This isn’t a sales pitch. It’s a reflection of what I’ve learned after spending years watching patients suffer from fragmented, poor-quality care.

Listen to our detailed podcast episode: “Things To Consider While Choosing A Dialysis Clinic” at Kidney Support Network Podcast.

This episode breaks down each critical factor in Hindi, in simple language that patients and families can understand and act on. Because in kidney care, knowledge isn’t just power—it’s survival.

Don’t let convenience or cost alone drive this decision. Don’t assume all centers are the same. And don’t wait until complications force you to learn these lessons the hard way.

Your kidneys have failed. But your dialysis center can still become part of your winning team.

Need Help Choosing the Right Dialysis Center?

Don’t navigate this decision alone. Contact us for expert guidance and consultation.

7Med India – Dialysis Centers Across North India
📞 +91 7718-771-888
✉️ info@7medindia.com
🌐 www.7medindia.com/our-clinics

About the Author: Mayank Sharma is CEO and Co-Founder of Epitome Kidney Urology Institute and Co-Founder & Director of 7Med India. With over 18 years in healthcare, he’s dedicated to patient education and improving dialysis care standards across India.

Related Reading:

  • Understanding Dialysis Adequacy – KT/V Explained
  • Vascular Access Care Guide
  • Diet Tips for Dialysis Patients

Source: https://www.kidneysupportnetwork.com/blog/how-to-choose-the-right-dialysis-centre-in-delhi-ncr-and-avoid-costly-mistakes/

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Yoga & The Working Class of India

30th December 2016Mayank SharmaArticles
Yoga & The Working Class of India

Yoga has been gaining traction over the last few years. Though until now, its growth rates were better seen in western world then its homeland India. Then few years back, came wave of Baba Ramdev – The Yoga Guru who rekindled yoga as a practice among the masses. Although the biggest push to Yoga as a practice came in December 2014, when on suggestion and recommendation of Indian Prime Minister Mr.Narendra Modi, United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) on 11th December, 2014 recognized “21st June” as International Yoga day. A big Indian push for a practice which can become a boon to the world.

The ground impact of this is yet to be seen but there has been increasing awareness and acceptance of yoga among individuals. Interestingly we saw Institutional interest in Yoga as well wherein government departments, Teaching Institutes and even private companies have started organizing yoga sessions and making it a routine for their employees. The institutional involvement can be a great boon for Yoga making it a lifestyle/status element for some and for others an opportunity to find time to do it out of their busy schedules.

Recently Indian PM Mr.Narendra Modi, while speaking at inaugural event of 21st International conference on Frontiers in Yoga Research and Its Applications(INCOFYRA) in Jigani, advised healthcare professionals to integrate traditional Indian treatment methodologies into modern healthcare. We all know that prevention is better than cure but it’s a philosophy rarely adopted by us. Results are ignored bodies and ignored minds we possess today. If WHO is to be believed India would loose more than $4.5 trillion by 2030 due to non communicable diseases or more specifically the lifestyle diseases. Diabetes, Heart ailments, lungs disorders topping the list. All these diseases are preventable with an active lifestyle and Yoga can be made integral part of it. To my limited understanding yoga has specific asanas to keep Heart and Lungs healthy. But it all sums up to us. Until we as individuals don’t start taking our own health seriously nothing is going to change.

A few days back, after reading my previous article titled, “Ignorance, Health Dilemma of the Working Class and a New Year Pledge … Welcome 2016 !!”, a friend who happens to be a healthcare economist told me that preventive measures like Yoga, exercise and healthy diets may seem time consuming to us, demanding time out of our money generating activities like our jobs, businesses; but he said that in long run a healthy body and mind makes a larger economic and financial benefit. In his views if a radical change is to be brought into the preventive healthcare and adopting practices like yoga institutions need to look deeper into their HR data. To my surprising look he responded by poking me to look at HR data of 7Med India and OpenGate’s, the two companies as an entrepreneur I live by.

I did it and was taken off the ground. Of all the leaves taken by our team mates (across all leave categories i.e. privilege, paid, sick etc.) more than 75% of leaves were taken on health grounds. Least most of the team had their sick leaves quota exhausted and were utilizing their privilege leaves because of their own or their family members health issues. In last 90 days, two of our key team mates had stayed away from work for more than 40 days due to lifestyle related health issues. I couldn’t have better understood what he was trying to say.

Time for me to re-think organizational development in light of the health economics driven by the health issues of my own teams. How about you, does your organization shows similar pattern ? A few said yes and a few didn’t knew and said may be. But all agreed that if overall health of their teams improves they would be a better organization in many ways.

An economic, financial and strategic decision point for Organizations. What are we waiting for ? Over a period of next couple of months, I would be working on making my own teams healthier and would be talking to fellow entrepreneurs about the idea and health economics behind it, to see if we can motivate few more on a healthy way.

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7Med Story – The Start of a Partnership we Cherish

10th December 2016Mayank SharmaArticles
7Med Story – The Start of a Partnership we Cherish

Today 10th December is our Foundation Day. The day 7Med India came into existence. I thought this would be the right moment to share the story which is behind a question many people have asked us.

The question is – “Why did we started a chain of Dialysis Clinics?”

There are few very obvious answers to it.

I and the co-founder Dr.Rakesh worked in Dialysis Industry at National positions in Fresenius Medical Care and were doing projects no one in Industry had done. Market research, Clinic Networking and much more. So we started our own chain of dialysis clinics. Another one – A Doctor and a project management guy with experience in same industry and wanting to start their own venture teamed up and rest is history. Yet another one can be – There is a huge gap in demand and supply and thus the opportunity called us and we jumped to do fill the gap.

Yes all the above form part of the story as well but was it enough. I think these all put together were not compelling enough to leave a senior management position in worlds largest Dialysis Care Company to start from scratch. Moreover all these analysis and reasons came to light later. The most compelling reason to start 7Med came with our own quest. While in Fresenius we were looking to find “THE ONE FACTOR” which can improve the patient health and dialysis outcomes dramatically?

The question was critical and the audience was divided. There came many options and opinions from internal team, Doctors, Technicians and more. There were obvious answers that came to the surface initially like water quality, access management, diet monitoring, strict liquid intake management, increased frequency of dialysis and many more. We did a detailed study of the dialysis procedure, discussion with nephrologists, practicing physicians, dialysis clinicians a large list of such factors were prepared. Procedure to narrow down the big list began and it indeed was tough to strike off many of the factors. Assigning one factor the maximum weight was a hard decision. The list was further narrowed down to 5 key factors. But something didn’t seem right. Logically we should be excited to have come to 5 major factors but we weren’t. As they say till the time you are satisfied you should keep working.

Then came the Moment of enlightenment, from a person we expected the least. While on our field visit we were talking to dialysis patients and were asking the same question. Few smiled and shrugged off without any response, few said it’s water, few believed it’s the dialysis technician among others. The discussion were interesting but weren’t leading to any clue when suddenly a patient said, “Its Me”. And to our surprise we felt its right. It’s the patient. While doing the entire exercise we realized that just like everybody we too had missed the obvious answer. Missed it because it was so obvious I think. As the proverb goes, “Solutions to biggest of problems lie nearby, they are just tough to see because of their simplicity”.

Indeed patients are the most significant factors who can contribute and change their own life on dialysis. Thus came the idea of a model dialysis clinic, which would focus on making patient in charge, giving them more knowledge and keeping them at center each and everything done in the clinic.

We had found a reason compelling enough to take the plunge. That’s the partnership, the partnership of a dialysis clinic and patients, it serves. The partnership which we named 7Med Kidney Care Centers. A partnership between renal failure patients and 7Med India Team.

Today after completing 3 years since we started 7Med and after 2 years of establishing our first clinic we know we have done good things on the way, but the fact remains that there is still a lot tobe done. And we are committed to make the journey together with our patient partners a healthy & memorable one.

Beginning of a New Partnership

Yes we are indeed talking about a Beginning. Beginning of a New Partnership.

What partnership ??

A story needs to be told to bring the right answer at the surface.

Healthcare innovation and research are areas which bring shine into the eyes of founders of 7Med India. While working with best of the renal care companies, helping various hospitals and renal clinic chains to set up their clinics & operations they stumbled upon a question. What is the most important factor that can dramatically improve life of patients on dialysis?

A team was set up and exploration began to find out the answer. Hardly ever we had thought that the answer would be so simple and yet a challenging task to achieve. There were obvious answers that came to the surface initially like water quality, access management, diet monitoring, strict liquid intake management, increased frequency of dialysis and many more. We did a detailed study of the dialysis procedure, discussion with nephrologists, practicing physicians, dialysis clinicians a large list of such factors were prepared. Procedure to narrow down the big list began and it indeed was tough to strike off many of the factors. Assigning one factor the maximum weight was a hard decision. The list was further narrowed down to 5 key factors. But something didn’t seem right. Logically we should be excited to have come to 5 major factors but we weren’t.

Then we talked to the patients on dialysis. Few smiled and shrugged off without any response, few said it’s water, few believed it’s the dialysis technician among others. The discussion were interesting but weren’t leading to any clue when suddenly a patient said its me. And to our surprise we felt its right. It’s the patient. While doing the entire exercise we realized that everybody had missed the obvious answer. Missed because it was so obvious. As the proverb goes, “Solutions to biggest of problems lie nearby, they are just tough to see because of their simplicity”.

Indeed patients are the most significant factors who can contribute and change their own life on dialysis. Thus came the idea of dialysis clinics which would focus on making patient in charge, giving them more knowledge and keeping them at center in whatever is done in the clinic. That’s the partnership, the partnership of a dialysis clinic and patients, it serves. The partnership which we named 7Med Kidney Care Centers. That’s what we believe is a partnership. A partnership between renal failure patients and 7Med India Team.

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Latest Posts

  • Why Kidney Disease is Called a “Silent Killer” in India
  • How to Choose the Right Dialysis Centre in Delhi NCR (And Avoid Costly Mistakes)
  • 7MED Welcomes Strategic Investment from PVP Ventures to Accelerate Healthcare Innovation
  • How to keep yourself and your kidneys healthy?
  • Take morning walks to stay healthy

Knowledge Base

1. Anaemia Management
  • Fast facts on Anaemia
  • Anaemia Symptoms
  • Anaemia Investigation
  • What is Erythropoietin?
  • Anaemia Monotoring
2. Dialysis Adequacy
  • Dialysis Dose & Adequacy
  • Urea Reduction Ratio
  • KT/V
  • URR & KT/V
  • Improving KT/V
3. Vascular Access Management
  • Vascular Access & its Types
  • Taking care of your access
  • Catheters
  • Taking care of your Catheter
4. Diet & Fluid Control Tips for Dialysis Patients
  • Make your low salt food Tasty!
  • Break the Salt Addiction
  • Avoid Artificial Salt Substitutes, Go Natural!
  • How to manage your daily fluid quota?
  • The Art of Savouring for Fluid Control
  • Tips to control thirst & fluid intake
  • 5 Potassium Rich Fruits That CKD Patients Should AVOID
  • 5 Potassium Rich Vegetables That CKD Patients Should AVOID
5. Kidney Friendly Recipe
  • Chana Dal Soup
  • Mixed Veg Curry
  • Baingan Bharta
  • Masala Bhindi
  • Rava Appam
  • Oats Chila
  • Sabudana Khichdi
  • Berry Tofu Smoothie
  • Vegetable Cutlet
  • Mango Rice
  • Omelet
6. Kidney Friendly Food
  • Blueberries
  • Grapes
  • Kidney Beans
  • Green Vegetables
  • Lemon
  • Strawberries
7. Health and Wellbeing
  • How to boost your immunity?
  • Tips to increase your immunity
  • Take morning walks to stay healthy
  • How to keep yourself and your kidneys healthy?

7Med India

Kidney Care Center

+91 7718-771-888

info@7medindia.com

www.7medindia.com

M3M Urbana Premium, Floor 12A, Sector 67, Golf Course Ext. Road, Gurugram, Haryana - 122101, India

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