By Peter Laird, MDIn truth, this is Dr. Scribner's vision completed, yet far too many patients in need of home hemodialysis and its proven benefits cannot overcome the many barriers to access this modality, not the least of which is the ponderously slow acceptance by the American nephrology community as well as many insurance companies.
Quote from: Hemodoc on April 03, 2011, 11:30:37 PMBy Peter Laird, MDIn truth, this is Dr. Scribner's vision completed, yet far too many patients in need of home hemodialysis and its proven benefits cannot overcome the many barriers to access this modality, not the least of which is the ponderously slow acceptance by the American nephrology community as well as many insurance companies. I don't think Medicare will pay for it either. The extra cost would make Medicare's long-term sustainability even less certain than it already is.
There are already people who do home hemo, so Medicare and insurance companies are already paying for it. As for "extra cost", I suspect that there really isn't that much net extra cost, if any at all. Labor costs would be reduced, but the biggest cost saving measure would come from the fewer hospitalizations that come from fewer people doing standard dialysis incenter. We already know that cardiovascular accidents are so much more common in those who are subjected to incenter thrice weekly dialysis, especially in those patients who are already compromised in that regard. Furthermore, infections are much more common in clinics, adding to yet more hospitalizations, and THAT's where the big costs are. Unfortunately, we are good at spending as little money as possible in the short term which leads to inevitable skyrocketing costs in the long term. We really do need to change that mindset. There is a big difference between gratuituous spending and wise investment, but our government doesn't seem to understand that.
Quote from: MooseMom on April 04, 2011, 04:53:07 PMThere are already people who do home hemo, so Medicare and insurance companies are already paying for it. As for "extra cost", I suspect that there really isn't that much net extra cost, if any at all. Labor costs would be reduced, but the biggest cost saving measure would come from the fewer hospitalizations that come from fewer people doing standard dialysis incenter. We already know that cardiovascular accidents are so much more common in those who are subjected to incenter thrice weekly dialysis, especially in those patients who are already compromised in that regard. Furthermore, infections are much more common in clinics, adding to yet more hospitalizations, and THAT's where the big costs are. Unfortunately, we are good at spending as little money as possible in the short term which leads to inevitable skyrocketing costs in the long term. We really do need to change that mindset. There is a big difference between gratuituous spending and wise investment, but our government doesn't seem to understand that.Many hemodialysis patients are unable to hold down a steady job. When you're unemployed, you're not paying Social Security or Medicare taxes into the system.From the government's financial point of view, the sooner such a patient dies, the better. That way he'll stop drawing money out of the system.