The battle over one of medicine’s fastest-growing and least loved markets:DIALYSIS—the use of machinery to make up for malfunctioning kidneys—is among medicine’s least loved treatments, both to endure and to administer. Patients have to be hooked to machines for hours at a time every few days. Those providing care often find it difficult, too: as many as a fifth of their patients die each year, many of them after choosing to stop their treatment. But it is also a fast-growing and lucrative market, and one that provides valuable lessons about making health care affordable.
Some 2m people receive regular dialysis to clean their blood of impurities that build up as a result of kidney failure. About a quarter of them are in America, which has one of the highest rates of dialysis in the world. This is less because Americans are especially unhealthy (although high rates of obesity and diabetes do play a role) and more because American health policy is to provide dialysis to anyone who needs it, regardless of their ability to pay or their chances of surviving much more than a few months. It is also the world’s most lucrative dialysis market, with the government spending $24 billion a year, or $71,000 a year per patient, on dialysis, and private insurers paying yet more.
Bill, I was hoping you'd chime in on this topic!I've read many of your posts and have visited "From the sharp end of the needle", so I should probably know the answer to this, but I am tired and sick and want to take the easy way out, so I'll just ask...what can we do as mere dialysis patients who might not be au fait with advocacy to push this idea of having good dialysis as the standard and not having making profit as the priority? Would it be possible for you to perhaps draft a letter outlining what goal we should be working toward in this regard so that we might have something to send to our Congresspeople? The practice of dialyzing in-center 3-4 times a week simply because that is the most financially lucrative method is appalling, and we should all be working toward something better than that. Thank you!
It's simply about making money. They don't really care how people feel on 3/day week dialysis or how the body tolerates it. It also seems chronic kidney disease innovation has come to a complete standstill. There is really nothing new on the horizon and no motivation to improve on things because there is so much money to be made with dialysis.