Benefits of at-home dialysis care
Around 37 million people — roughly 15%of all American adults — currently suffer from chronic kidney disease (CKD), while another 80 million are at risk for developing it.1 Further, more than 800,000 Americans suffer from end-stage renal disease (ESRD).2
All told, that means that more than 45% of American adults are either currently facing a kidney condition or are likely to encounter one in the future.3
There are 2 treatment options for end-stage kidney disease. A patient can receive a kidney transplant — though only 22,000 are performed each year, in part, because donor-recipient matches are hard to come by4 — or they can take the more common route of dialysis.
Today, roughly 557,000 patients in the U.S. receive dialysis treatments,5 the vast majority of which are performed in an outpatient clinic setting.
When travel time is factored in, the average dialysis patient can expect to spend as much as 5 hours per session 3 times a week.6 As a result, basic activities like maintaining employment, caring for children or traveling become virtually impossible.
To further complicate patients’ schedules, standard clinic dialysis often requires extended recovery time after each session. The median range is 2–4 hours, but 25% of patients report recovery times of 6 hours or more.7
What’s more, ESRD patients may need to be on dialysis for 5, 10 or even 20 years8—meaning this cumbersome treatment process may become a constant feature of their lives for years.
To address this conundrum, a dialysis-at-home movement has been building over the past 5–10 years. Beyond improving patients’ quality of life, conducting dialysis treatments in the comfort and safety of individuals’ homes also improves health outcomes, reduces health care costs and makes long-term dialysis more accessible.
Patients who conduct their dialysis at home have may more energy, get better sleep and are better able to keep up their appetite. That’s in addition to circumventing the scheduling and travel hurdles that come with long-term, in-clinic treatments.
In addition, conducting dialysis more frequently at home can reduce long recovery times. These benefits can translate to greater treatment adherence and thus better health outcomes — not to mention significantly lower costs. A study published by the Center for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) found that $23.5 million could be saved in five and a half years if just one third of its ESRD patients switched from in-clinic to at-home dialysis.9