The Kidney Citizen May 2018 | Page 3

Dialysis Patients Secure Access to Life Saving Care By Megan Beveridge , Director of Congressional Relations, DPC We have great news to report for dialysis patients! In early February, Congress passed a short-term funding bill which funded the government through March 23rd. This legislation contained a budget deal which will boost military and nonmilitary funding by billions. At the same time, it includes several provisions which ensure dialysis patients will have access to life saving care. One provision included in this spending package is from the Medicare Part B Improvement Act of 2017 (H.R. 3178), which was introduced July 7th, 2017 by Reps Kevin Brady (R-Texas) and Richard Neal (D-Mass.), the Chairman and Ranking Member of the House Ways & Means Committee. This provision permits health care providers to utilize data from home dialysis equipment to monitor their patients. Currently, many patients receiving home dialysis treatments have hi-tech equipment in their homes that provide valuable data. This provision would allow nephrologists and dialysis providers to access this important information as well as to provide and bill for services they deliver remotely, also referred to as telemedicine. These technologies can now be leveraged by Medicare providers to help provide better care and reduce overall health care costs, while also increasing access to health care providers. Another key provision of the Medicare Part B Improvement Act that was included in the funding bill will allow dialysis treatment centers to seek Medicare-approved, outside accreditation to provide dialysis treatments. Currently, facilities that provide care for Medicare beneficiaries face a state survey and certification process along with a Medicare accreditation process to participate in the program. Of these facilities, dialysis facilities are the only ones that are not able to be surveyed and accredited by outside agencies. This has resulted in long delays for the approval of new dialysis facilities as well as extremely high startup costs that discourage new centers from being opened, especially in rural communities where there may be fewer patients making it more difficult to recoup those initial costs. Thi s provision would streamline this process and prevent unnecessary delays in access to care. Finally, the spending package included a provision which would reauthorize Medicare Special Needs Plans (SNPs) which are Medicare Advantage plans providing care for patients with special needs and chronic diseases, such as End Stage Renal Disease. This provision would reauthorize these plans for 5 years, the longest reauthorization since their creation, and provide patients with more care coordination, including access to health care specialists who can address their specific health care needs. It will also provide them with a more stable and permanent path forward. As America’s largest patient-led kidney disease organization representing 30,000 dialysis patients and family members, we worked hard at DPC advocating in support of these critical issues and want to applaud Congress for including them in the spending bill. Access to affordable, quality health care is essential for all patients, but especially dialysis patients, and these provisions will not only improve their access to care but also remove barriers which are currently harming that access. 3