Living-Donor Kidney Transplantation: Reducing Financial Barriers to Live Kidney Donation--Recommendations from a Consensus Conference

Live-donor kidney transplantation (LDKT) is the best treatment for eligible people with late-stage kidney disease. Despite this, living kidney donation rates have declined in the United States in recent years. A potential source of this decline is the financial impact on potential and actual living...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical journal of the American Society of Nephrology 2015-09, Vol.10 (9), p.1696-1702
Hauptverfasser: Tushla, Lara, Rudow, Dianne LaPointe, Milton, Jennifer, Rodrigue, James R, Schold, Jesse D, Hays, Rebecca
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container_issue 9
container_start_page 1696
container_title Clinical journal of the American Society of Nephrology
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creator Tushla, Lara
Rudow, Dianne LaPointe
Milton, Jennifer
Rodrigue, James R
Schold, Jesse D
Hays, Rebecca
description Live-donor kidney transplantation (LDKT) is the best treatment for eligible people with late-stage kidney disease. Despite this, living kidney donation rates have declined in the United States in recent years. A potential source of this decline is the financial impact on potential and actual living kidney donors (LKDs). Recent evidence indicates that the economic climate may be associated with the decline in LDKT and that there are nontrivial financial ramifications for some LKDs. In June 2014, the American Society of Transplantation's Live Donor Community of Practice convened a Consensus Conference on Best Practices in Live Kidney Donation. The conference included transplant professionals, patients, and other key stakeholders (with the financial support of 10 other organizations) and sought to identify best practices, knowledge gaps, and opportunities pertaining to living kidney donation. This workgroup was tasked with exploring systemic and financial barriers to living kidney donation. The workgroup reviewed literature that assessed the financial effect of living kidney donation, analyzed employment and insurance factors, discussed international models for addressing direct and indirect costs faced by LKDs, and summarized current available resources. The workgroup developed the following series of recommendations to reduce financial and systemic barriers and achieve financial neutrality for LKDs: (1) allocate resources for standardized reimbursement of LKDs' lost wages and incidental costs; (2) pass legislation to offer employment and insurability protections to LKDs; (3) create an LKD financial toolkit to provide standardized, vetted education to donors and providers about options to maximize donor coverage and minimize financial effect within the current climate; and (4) promote further research to identify systemic barriers to living donation and LDKT to ensure the creation of mitigation strategies.
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subjects Consensus
Employment
Health Services Accessibility - economics
Housing - economics
Humans
Insurance Coverage
Insurance, Health
Kidney Transplantation - economics
Kidney Transplantation - trends
Living Donors - education
Moving Points in Nephrology
Reimbursement Mechanisms
Salaries and Fringe Benefits
Transportation - economics
title Living-Donor Kidney Transplantation: Reducing Financial Barriers to Live Kidney Donation--Recommendations from a Consensus Conference
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