Once you start home training, Medicare becomes primary, no matter how long it's been since you started dialysis. If you have to call, make sure to tell them it will save them money!
Here is a section copied from Home Dialysis Central (http://www.homedialysis.org/resources/medicarefaq/). They say my employer insurance should cover during the 30 months. I'll keep checking other sites. .[Most insurance pays for home dialysis and training. Some managed care organizations may require "prior authorization." If your insurance won't approve home dialysis or training, ask your doctor, dialysis clinic, or ESRD Network to go to bat for you. Once your insurance knows that people who choose home dialysis do as well or better than those on in-center dialysis, and that home dialysis may be cheaper, it will probably cover these services.If you have an employer group health plan (EGHP), it will pay first and Medicare will pay second for 30 months from when you could have Medicare (the "coordination of benefits" period). When you start home training and home dialysis during this 30 month period, your EGHP pays first and Medicare pays second. So, if your EGHP does not pay the whole charge, your clinic can bill Medicare for the balance. After 30 months, Medicare will pay first and your EGHP will pay second.
Keep it up. There are lots of people in Washington doing home hemo. Ask for help from the NKC folks, and I iwll be glrad to get a letter form PSKC.