Millions were raised to fund the medical centre, with charitable donations from the likes of the Jockey Club and businessman Li Ka-shing, reported the Post at the time
“The Hongkong Kidney Foundation will soon have its own treatment centre in Kowloon for patients with kidney diseases,” reported the South China Morning Post on September 23, 1980. “The centre will be in Prince Building, Prince Edward Road. It will be the colony’s first kidney diseases treatment centre. The centre, which will also serve as the foundation’s headquarters, has been made possible by various donations.
On August 5, 1981, the Post stated, “The acting Governor, Sir Jack Cater, will this evening officiate at the opening of the Hongkong Kidney Foundation’s dialysis centre. The centre has been bought with a donation from Mr Li Ka-shing. This has enabled the foundation, which is a voluntary organisation dedicated to helping kidney patients, to begin functioning.”
The next day, the Post reported that “Sir Jack Cater, officiated at the opening ceremony, held at the Pearl Theatre in Causeway Bay. And he praised the Hongkong Kidney Foundation, who will run the new centre in Kowloon, for its ‘vigorous efforts to focus [on] and combat the problems experienced by kidney disease sufferers in Hongkong.’







