Researchers commissioned by the National Health Service (NHS) found that 15,000-40,000 excess deaths every year are caused by acute kidney injury (AKI), which causes a loss of kidney function and can develop very quickly.
The research, carried out by kidney disease experts and Insight Health Economics, found that AKI is five times more prevalent in English hospitals than previously thought.
It can occur in people who are already ill with conditions such as heart failure or diabetes and those admitted to hospital with infections.
AKI costs the health service more than 1 billion pound every year, according to a study commissioned by NHS Improving Quality.
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The report's co-author Prof Donal O'Donoghue, consultant renal physician at Salford Royal NHS foundation trust, said: "We know that at least a thousand people a month are dying in hospital from AKI due to poor care.
"These deaths are avoidable. This is completely unacceptable and we can't allow it to continue. Good basic care would save these lives and save millions of pounds for the NHS. Doctors and nurses need to make elementary checks to prevent AKI. In general, people who are having surgery should not be asked to go without water for longer than two hours.
Marion Kerr, health economist at Insight Health Economics, said the 1 billion pound annual cost to the NHS "is more than we spend on breast, lung and bowel cancer combined".
She added: "Every day, more than 30 people are dying needlessly. Compare that to MRSA which was killing about four people a day at its peak. Simple improvements in basic care could save the NHS 200 million pound a year and, more importantly, save thousands of lives."
"Health research based on real life evidence like this is vitally important for NHS commissioners in choosing where to target their resources.