A Non-Profit 501c3 Kidney Patient Empowerment Organization

Top 5 Reasons To Refer Transplant Early

According to Mayo Clinic, physicians should refer kidney patients for transplant when their GFR reaches 25 to ensure they are evaluated and listed in a timely fashion. The goal is get patients evaluated before their condition worsens, and ultimately avoid complications from dialysis that could affect transplant eligibility. (Excerpts taken from: https://www.mayoclinic.org/medical-professionals/transplant-medicine/news/top-5-reasons-to-refer-a-patient-early-for-kidney-transplant/mac-20575082).

Late Referrals:

1. Force transplant eligible patients on dialysis. Dialysis leads to a significant decline in the patient’s quality of life—and increases risks for infections, anemia and cardiovascular events such as stroke, heart failure and myocardial infarction.

2. Sabotage transplant opportunities as the patient’s health and independence declines, triggering disqualifying co-morbidities.

3. Rob eligible transplant patients from vital education that would otherwise prepare them for proactive self-advocacy, and a timely listing for the best outcome.

4. Stretch out “evaluation timelines” and disrupt the likelihood of underlying medical conditions getting evaluated beforehand.

5. Lead to unrealistic timelines for finding suitable living kidney donors. Much of this is due to poor education, and a lack of preemptive (live-donor) awareness and encouragement.

There are several resources available to help patients attract living kidney donors who can help them avoid (or eliminate the need) for dialysis. One such resource is the “Donor Seeker,” which inspires hopeful recipients talk-up, team-up and learn how to share their story to attract interested donors in less than 15-minutes.  “Donor Seeker” is a free download from Android and Apple app stores. Learn more here: https://transplantfirst.org/donor-seeker-how-to-find-kidney-donors/


Story Videos ( Share Your Story in Video)

If you hesitate to talk about your need for a living kidney donor there is an engaging social media concept you can consider. It involves the use of story videos. Story Videos are a great way to get your story out there with more than just words. They offer facts and attention-grabbing visual content.

It has been said that people remember 95% of what they watch in a video and only 10% of what they read in text. This is what makes informative story videos so powerful. You can either make your own story video or have them professionally produced and customized.

Social Media Story Videos

Do you need to get your story out in social media so more people know that you are hoping to find a living kidney donor for your much-needed transplant?  Here’s your chance to get a professional video produced with your name and contact information for you and your transplant center.  

Our video producer has walked a mile in your shoes. All you have to do is answer a few questions and we’ll create the content to educate and inform your viewers from the moment they click “play.”  In less than less than 3 minutes they’ll understand your need and know how to help if they choose to do so.

Video Not Your Thing?

No worries. We’ve done the heavy lifting for you. You can get a semi-custom video for a fraction of the cost you’d have to pay to hire a professional videographer to create and edit. Check out our example below—to see how story videos can be your best outreach tool for sharing your story.

Here’s what you’ll get:

Your customized video will include:

  • ‘Ready-to-Post’ 2-minute inspirational video 
  • Your name and contact info will be included, along with your transplant center’s and applicable links
  • Facts on the value of living kidney donor transplants — and the hardships of dialysis 
  • Your urgent need for a transplant, and the risks involved in waiting for a deceased donor’s kidney 
  • An invitation to learn more, share your video in social media — and expand your search 

Don’t waste another minute waiting to see what comes next.

Start networking your story with a professionally produced video about your story and need.

Become a Donor-Magnet® by posting your story video and start attracting potential donors!

Discover more about story videos at this link: https://transplantfirst.org/story-videos/

Your Ideal Donor is Out There!

Talking about your hope to find a kidney donor can be overwhelming. With your own story video you aren’t faced with having to build up the courage before sharing your story. Your video does that for you. Viewers can either respond or simply share your video in their network to expand your search. *Depending on your social network, you can get 100’s of eyeballs within just a few hours.

Discover more about story videos at this link:  https://transplantfirst.org/story-videos/

You can also discover more about our revolutionary “Donor Seeker” mobile app for English & Spanish “how to” videos and powerful resource links here: https://transplantfirst.org/donor-seeker-how-to-find-kidney-donors/

New Children’s Book for Adult Kidney Patients Waiting for a Transplant

Check out our new children’s book on living kidney donation, called “Sydney’s Kidney Adventure: Her Big Wish for Mom Comes True.” It’s an uplifting tale of a child’s endearing “treasure hunt” for a living kidney donor to end her mother’s wait for a transplant— that will touch the hearts of kids and adults alike.

Watch our 1-minute cinematic book trailer here:

This captivating children’s book is not just a story, it’s a life lesson in the incredible power of family love and human kindness. The book has also been described as a “A children’s book that naturally inspires adult readers to explore living donation for themselves or someone in need.”

This book offers parents a way to ease into conversations about a loved one’s need for a kidney transplant and their search for a living kidney donor. It was also written to motivate waitlisted kidney patients (and their family and friends) to talk-up their loved one’s need for a living kidney donor.

If we inspired you to grab a copy, I’d be over the moon if you’d share your thoughts with me (or in an Amazon Review).

Available on Amazon:

Living Donor Protection Act 2024 – H.R. 2923/S. 1384 (2023-2024),

After Five Attempts to Pass, Let’s Make This Year Our Last!
When life gives you a 2nd chance, you want to make it count. I’ve been chipping away at this goal ever since I received my preemptive kidney transplant from an unrelated living kidney donor 13 years ago. Yet, as I advocate to increase preemptive transplant opportunities and create patient engagement programs for transplant centers, allied partners, and various organizations—all my efforts seem to pale in comparison to the truth that remains.
More than 178,000 (and counting) living kidney donors are inadequately protected.
Living kidney donors are brave and selfless souls who offer great promise for a better and longer life. The life I now live. But what assurances do they get for being our life-saving heroes? Many of us believe living donors deserve far more guarantees. Allow me to point out the inequities below:
Inequity #1: Living kidney donors put their life at risk to save the life of another without personal or financial benefit, or future protections.
Inequity #2: Living donors risk insurance discrimination by potentially being denied coverage for life, disability, and long-term care insurance. They can also have their coverage limited (or charged at a higher rate) just because they’re a living donor.
According to a study published in the American Journal of Transplantation 25% of living donors had trouble getting life insurance. They were denied, charged more, or told they had a “pre-existing” condition. *If there is any “pre-existing” condition to be considered, it should be their rigorously tested (and proven) health record that qualified them for donation.
Inequity #3: Living donors lack job security. They need assurances that their job will still be there when they return from taking time off for donation or recovery.
The Solution: The Living Donor Protection Act (LDPA)—currently known as H.R. 2923/S. 1384 (2023-2024), was designed to course-correct these barriers to donation by educating donors about these protections against insurance discrimination and job loss.
To that end, the passing of this bill would honor and protect living donors from both current and future discrimination when applying for life, disability, and long-term care insurance. By doing so, they cannot be denied, cancelled, or refused issue—and their premiums cannot increase solely based on the fact that they’ve donated an organ.
Additionally, this bill calls upon the U.S. Department of Labor to codify organ donation and recovery as a covered classification under the Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993 (FMLA). It also calls on the Secretary of Health and Human Services to educate the public on the benefits and risks of living organ donation.
The Urgent Call: Countless lives are lost each year this bill doesn’t pass. Annually, this equates to more than 8,600* waitlisted kidney patients losing their chance for ever getting a kidney transplant, because they either became too ill or died while waiting for a deceased donor’s kidney. *
*Looking back to the first year we tried (and congress failed) to pass protections for living organ donors (2013-2014), the number of casualties has increased 10-fold. If we only count the years we have been advocating for change, our nation’s organ shortage has impacted nearly 90,000 kidney patient lives—and it’s on course to only get worse. That is, until we educate the public on living donation and remove critical barriers.
Increasing & Protecting Living Donors
Living kidney donation is the preferred alternative to the long wait for a deceased donor’s kidney. Getting a kidney from a living donor not only shortens the wait—kidneys from living donors do better and last longer.
Undoubtedly, more people would consider live donation if there was more public awareness and education about the procedure, recovery and risks—and specific protections were offered (and better known) before donation. The passing of LDPA 2023-2024 would make this so.
Granted, this bill may not include everything living donors deserve, like life insurance against the risk of death or long-term disability for health effects as a result of donating an organ, or medical expense reimbursement for long-term follow up care. Nonetheless, it’s an incredibly important step forward.
You would think with bipartisan support throughout the years (i.e., 2014, 2016, 2017, 2019 and 2021), and support from transplant professionals, nephrologists, kidney patients, transplant recipients, living organ donors, and even the insurance industry, it would have passed into law by now.
This Is Our Sixth Attempt. Let’s Make It Our Last.
We need your voice to encourage legislators of the 118th Congress to support H.R. 2923/S.1384 (2023-2024) and move it across the finish line by signing it into law—once and for all. It’s not just the right thing to do. It’s a moral duty way past its time.
We need your voice to encourage legislators of the 118th Congress to support H.R. 2923/S.1384 (2023-2024), to get it across the finish line and signed into law—once and for all.
It’s not just the right thing to do. It’s a moral duty way past its time.
Take Action Now!
Step 1: Use this link to send a letter to your U.S. Representatives
Step 2: Sign AAKP’s Petition (look for the header “TAKE A STAND” at link below)
The Living Donor Protection Act (H.R. 2923 / S. 1384) – 2023-2024 is sponsored by Senators Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) and Tom Cotton (R-AR), and Representatives Jerrold Nadler (D-NY), Troy Balderson (R-OH), Jim Costa (D-CA), John Curtis (R-UT), Diana DeGette (D-CO), Mariannette Miller-Meeks (R-IA), Gregory F. Murphy, M.D. (R-NC) and Lisa Blunt Rochester (D-DE)
Article written by Risa Simon, Founder TransplantFirst.org, and TransplantStrong.com (A division of Simon Says Seminars, inc.). For more information contact: Risa@transplantfirst.org

Transplant Costs vs Dialysis

The Living Kidney Donor Support Act would benefit tens of thousands of Americans and save billions of tax dollars.
This organ shortage is costly to the people who end up waiting longer for transplant or who die awaiting one, and to taxpayers who pay most of the health care costs of people with end-stage kidney disease.
Transplants cost $133,000, and immunosuppressant medications cost $25,000, while dialysis costs $90,000 a year. That means that in Year 1 the government pays $133,000 per transplant and $25,000 for immunosuppressants —but stops paying dialysis costs. For the next nine years, it continues paying for immunosuppressants instead of dialysis, realizing $65,000 in savings each of those years the patient is not on dialysis. In essence, transplant costs would be paid off in two years and produce eight years of savings, or just over $500,000.

Should A Parent Accept A Kidney From An Adult Child or Loved One?

Most parents (or those in need of a kidney transplant) are often reluctant if not strongly opposed to accepting a child’s (or loved one’s) kidney donation. Ironically, adult children and family members already make independent decisions on their own, yet reluctant parents don’t seem to see it that way.

Parents are wired to protect their children. That said, they often feel accepting a kidney from a child is incongruent to their parental oaths and responsibility to keep their loved ones out of harm’s way.

Oddly enough, most parents don’t put themselves in their children’s (or loved one’s) shoes and therefore don’t view their objections as hurtful or harmful.

Parents need to be guided so they can see their opposition to accepting the gift of life from a child is actually hurtful. The hurtful part comes into play when the parent robs the child of joy and psychological gain, which they’d receive from helping a beloved parent live a better and longer life.

To balance perceptions, create a reverse scenario for the parent to ponder. Ask the parent if they’d ever consider donating a kidney to their mother or father if they were in need. Chances are, you’ll hear a resounding “Of course, I would!”

When this is the case, present 2 follow-up questions:

  1. How would you feel if your mother or father disallowed you from trying to save their life?
  2. Could you live with the memory of being prohibited from saving, enhancing or extending your parent’s life?

Putting the shoe on the other foot often allows parents to reframe their need to dishonor their child’s wishes. And, while protecting a child’s medical safety by prohibiting donation, it actually hurts their emotional and physiological health for years to come.

Let’s face it. The child wasn’t asking for approval. They were simply stepping up to serve. Their desire to help is merely a reflection of the loving values their parents taught them –family first, always.

We often forget that the gift in giving is not in the receiving, but rather the joy one receives from the giving. No one should have the power to take that away from the giver.

Donors have said, “If my recipient refused my offer, I’d be robbed of a blessing.” It’s not the receiver’s call to accept or decline. That’s the transplant centers’ job.

So, the next time you hear a parent in need of a kidney transplant refuse to accept one of their children as a potential donor—or anyone refuse to accept a kidney from a loved one—read this article to them, or better yet, print it off and hand it over with endearing smile.

Author: Risa Simon, 2010 (live-donor) preemptive kidney transplant recipient, motivational speaker, inspirational author, patient mentor/advocate and founder/CEO of Simon Says Seminars, inc., TransplantFirst Academy, TransplantStrong, and the Donor-Seeker® Program. For more information contact: risa@transplantstrong.com  or visit: www.TransplantStrong.com

 

 

Untethered Truths: The Moral Imperative To Boost Preemptive Kidney Transplants

If history is a global indicator of end stage renal disease (ESRD), a vast number of people will face an unimaginable reality. Currently, 37 million American adults are estimated to have kidney disease, and most are unaware until they advance to end-stage challenges—and due to that delay, they miss their opportunity to secure a preemptive (before dialysis) transplant.

Moreover, the 726,000 individuals already suffering ESRD challenges are not alone. Each year they are joined by 126,000 unsuspecting newcomers.1

While the rate of this growing population is highly disturbing, the destructive consequences of the disease are far more alarming. Over the last three decades, more than 980,000 ESRD patients lost an early battle to this disease—and it’s not getting any better. The premature death toll is estimated to rise to 1.4 million by 2027.1

Today, half a million ESRD patients are struggling to stay alive on dialysis. Of those, more than 95,000 pray they’ll survive years of waiting for a kidney transplant from our nation’s insufficient organ supply.  Sadly, the lion’s share of ESRD patients will never actualize a transplant (before they need dialysis), because they were overlooked as potential transplant candidates.

Dialysis conversations are often presented as the first line treatment—with little, if any mention to it being less desirable than transplant.   Most patients don’t realize dialysis is incapable of removing all the body’s toxins, replenishing essential hormones or replacing active vitamins. They are rarely told those sacred functions are an “inside job,” managed exclusively by healthy human kidneys.

Without this understanding, patients can be easily swayed to disregard transplant opportunities until they’ve started dialysis. Very few patients realize the consequences of postponing transplant could lead to less favorable outcomes. It can also jeopardize candidacy, and even shorten their lifespan.

ESRD patients deserve to know the untethered truths about their options and be encouraged to secure their best quality of life. Alarming statistics about dialysis associated infections and life-threatening comorbidities must also be better known to help patients make more informed decisions.

Statistics matter too. Informing patients that 20% of the 100,000 ESRD patients who begin dialysis each year are expected to die within their first year—and 50% are likely to die within 5 years, are prime examples of what patients need to know before saying yes to dialysis.2

While critical facts are not easy to share, professionals must disclose these facts to help patients gain full transparency in informed consent. This practice can encourage eligible patients to proactively set goals to secure a transplant before they require dialysis. When best practices are timed appropriately, patients can engage in a more proactive manner.

Kidneys from Living Donors

Kidney transplants performed with a kidney from a living kidney donor (LKD) can offer a multitude of benefits. Some of those benefits include the transplanted kidney responding quicker, functioning better and lasting longer than those transplanted with kidneys from deceased organ donors.

LKDs also offer their recipients a fast track to transplant, by allowing them to schedule their transplant closer to their time of need. This is key, as recipients can often bypass the need for dialysis, which opens the path to preemptive kidney transplantation, or PKT.

From quality of life to better survival rates, less medical complications and reduced depression, PKT can offer recipients a better and longer life. The PKT advantages allow recipients at a more productive role in society, return to their jobs quicker, and stay employed longer. Preemptive recipients can also enjoy more time with family and friends.

From a financial perspective, getting a transplant is less costly than time on dialysis. We know this to be true because transplants save taxpayers an estimated $146,000/ per transplant performed.3 Yet, despite these extraordinary benefits preemptive transplant is severely underutilized.2 It is time to expose the detrimental ramifications in lost PKT opportunities as an urgent call to course correct. This article embodies that call by exposing (and dismantling) unconscionable PKT conundrums.

Common Barriers

One of the most common barriers in PKT stems from an outdated mindset that “stable” renal function—requires no action.4 This belief ignores life-threatening consequences due to sudden declines from underlying disease and/or co-morbidities.4,5,6 Patients rely on their physicians for guidance. The silence coming from their trusted advisors is beyond deafening. It’s become potentially life-threatening.

Trigger #1. Historically, there has been a general reluctance to initiate early renal replacement conversations for fear of frightening patients prematurely or depressing ineligible populations. While holding-back conversations might mitigate distress for some, it clearly robs quality of life from many others.

Trigger #2. Fear and social-cultural differences can keep patients from more favorable pathways.4 This is particularly true for those unable to accept their imminent loss of renal function. Nonetheless, a patient’s readiness, willingness and desire for a better life is often physician driven.

Hence, it is far wiser to use patient fear as a powerful catalyst, rather than a deterrent. Simply stated, a clear understanding of what a patient could face if they don’t proactively seek a preemptive transplant, is often more impactful than what they could potentially gain by achieving this goal.

Timing is Everything

The timing of patient engagement also plays an important role in outcome success. While the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) offers a six-hour covered benefit for patient education, the program disincentivizes PKT options by restricting access to individuals above eGFR 29.7  Supported by the Improvements for Patients and Providers Act [MIPPA] of 2008, one would think the program’s name alone would ensure congruent standards to support its core purpose.

If we agree that PKT success relies heavily on early chronic kidney disease (CKD) education, we must agree that patients deserve enough “processing time” to apply new knowledge, contemplate their options and proactively seek their best outcome.

Likewise, we must also agree that the Organ Procurement and Transplant Network’s (OPTN) suggestion to refer patients to transplant within Stage 4 and 5 is too broad in range and vague in scope to optimize PKT opportunities.4 We know this to be true from the low rate of preemptive transplants performed to date. The few patients who discover transplant benefits and request a preemptive referral, typically find themselves in a nephrologist or transplant center “push-back” war. They’re often told it’s “too early” because their eGFR is stable or hasn’t fallen consistently below 20.

To the patient, push-back translates to “Wait to get sicker”—with no regard for protecting future eligibility or losing active donor interest.  When patients are referred to transplant as they approach dialysis’s ledge, they experience an automatic disadvantage of insufficient time—a precondition for finding, testing and awaiting evaluation committee conclusions.

Waiting for a kidney from a deceased donor has become a guaranteed PKT “deal-breaker.” We know this to be true, because virtually all preemptive transplants are achieved when candidates present a qualifying LKD before they require dialysis.

To that end, CKD patients must be exposed to PKT options in earlier stages of disease, ideally starting as early as eGFR 59.8 This timeline will ensure patients have enough time to process their options, contemplate their future, and fight for their best life possible.

Patient Education

Despite CMS’s covered benefits for chronic kidney disease (CKD) education, very few transplant-eligible patients benefit. Much of this is due to disseminating a downpour of dialysis content prior to introducing transplant options.  Content prioritization must be improved to avoid confusion, overwhelm and blurring “optimal choice” benefits.

Using a sales analogy, a customer is more prone to remember and connect with the first product they are exposed to, particularly if the salesperson is more enthusiastic or knowledgeable about that product. By the time a second option is introduced, the customer can fall into “information-overload,” making it difficult to discern the key differences between the two products presented.

This analogy underscores risks associated in having large dialysis organizations LDOs (who admittedly report low levels of transplant knowledge) develop and present ESRD education. Using this scenario, curriculum developers might unconsciously create bias and potential conflicts of interests.

To correct this problem, ESRD content must be developed, challenged and approved by a diverse team of transplant and dialysis professionals to reveal the full scope of balanced risks and benefits. Post-transplant recipients and dialysis patients also deserve a seat at the curriculum development table to ensure their voices are heard.

Disseminate Best Options-First!

It is well known and documented that PKT is the best option for better outcomes. This claim underscores the renal profession’s responsibility to help patients try to bypass the need for dialysis, regardless of presumed transplant interest or eligibility. While a patient may not appear to be transplant-eligible at the time of training, dialysis comparisons can encourage ineligible populations to proactively strive for future candidacy.

Of equal importance, patient education must be free of misinformation and bias. Education must also be provided upstream, in earlier stages of disease, to ensure ample time for decision-making—before they are inundated with overwhelming health burdens. Unless deeper conversations about treatment options are proactively presented, patients will be unable to make proactive decisions.

This reality is underscored by studies that show 80% of ESRD patients are inadequately educated about transplantation and living donor options.9

Motivation is Key

ESRD patients often surrender to dialysis as an inevitable destiny. The belief for most patients is that dialysis is a prerequisite to transplant—and it appears easier. Even if these patients had the energy to consider a better life option, the emotional toll from managing ESRD make that reality difficult to imagine.

No one would argue transplant is a more difficult bridge to cross when compared to dialysis. For starters, dialysis does not require extensive medical testing or an extra kidney. Yet, patients will never work towards achieving this goal without giving them good reason.

Information is power. Hence, the patient’s full understanding of risks and benefits will always drive their level of interest. Herein lies the nephrologist’s opportunity to make a difference. By committing to delivering small, repeatable and expandable segments of patient education— (when their patients are healthier and more eager to fight for a better life), they’ll be able to contemplate their best option in advance of need.

“Luck is what happens when preparation meets opportunity.”-Elmer Letterman

Challenges

The first hurdle for hopeful PKT recipients involves timely evaluations. Despite the high 5-year mortality rate of dialysis, transplant referrals are intentionally delayed. Yet, if transplant referrals were viewed with the same level of urgency as a life-threatening condition, this hurdle could be overcome.10

The next, and seemingly never-ending challenge for hopeful PKT recipients, comes with the task of finding potential donors. It has been reported that the majority of ESRD patients are inadequately educated about transplantation and living donor options.9 Another study revealed 80% of transplant candidates polled admitted that they are intimidated by the thought of identifying potential donors, and another 60% claimed they were too embarrassed to bring up the subject.

Finding potential donors through family or friends is hard enough. The smarter “ask” is a request to expand need awareness through word-of-mouth and social networking.9 To that end, patient engagement programs must include guidance on how to educate the general public on the opportunity and need to increase living kidney donation.8

Improvements in patient education, including scripts and role-play examples to build confidence and strengthen interactions are also needed.4,9 Of equal importance, curriculums must encourage dialogues with family and friends, including how to script invitations to join campaign forces through social media.

Additional challenges surface when potential donors change their mind. This is not uncommon. Everyone has the right to change their mind— particularly on a decision of this gravity. Transplant centers actually encourage potential donors to reconsider their decision to ensure they don’t have any doubts or concerns moving forward.

The bright side for those who either can’t (or choose not to) move forward, is seen in their willingness to expand the search for more potential donors. Another challenge surfaces when an acceptable donor finds themselves incompatible to their intended recipient. Nearly 35% of all living kidney donors are found to be incompatible to their intended recipients. Fortunately, Kidney Paired Donation (KPD) programs offer incompatible donors a wonderful way to stay in the game and create a win for all.

One of the toughest hurdles for potential living kidney donors involves gaining family support. When potential donors tell their loved one’s that they want to donate a kidney to a friend—or a stranger, it can go over like a lead balloon. Understandably, parents, spouses and adult children are wired to protect their loved ones. This is where education becomes key. Support is best gained when supporters know more about the process. This includes the degree of risk, timing of recovery and their potential role in caregiving.

The amount of time a donor must take off work for testing, surgery and recovery can also squelch a donor’s intentions. Having to take a minimum of 3 weeks off (for recovery) can put job security at risk, not to mention a heavy financial burden into play when it’s taken without pay. It only gets worse when the donor is up against out of pocket travel expenses—and costs for dependent, elderly and pet care while they’re recovering.

While there is the possibility to request assistance for those donating to lower income recipients, hopeful advocates await the government passing of the Living Donor Protection Act of 2021.11,12 (Currently, a handful of states have passed limited variations of their own statewide bills).

Transplant centers can also cause hurdles. One of those hurdles is seen in a tactic referred to as a “cooling off” period. This intentional “delay response” protocol is used to ensure prospective donors are fully committed.

Not surprisingly, however, potential donors are disheartened by the center’s lack of response. To them, the silence is incongruent to their “urgent call” to save a life.   Transplant centers that use delay tactics like these are encouraged to become more sensitive to the detrimental consequences for their hopeful recipients.

The challenge to find potential donors who are willing to step forward is hard enough. Add the complexity of donor evaluations, surgical risks and time off work—alongside delayed communications and the hope to secure a living donor transplant appears nearly impossible.

Providers need incentives too. Nephrologists are not fairly compensated for pre-transplant or post-transplant patient visits. Hence, a separate payment needs to be considered for time involved in transplant preparation and care—including referrals to transplant centers.4 This strategy alone holds a powerful means for increasing preemptive transplant rates.

Our current kidney allocation system is a challenge because it causes confusion. This occurs when waitlist credit is awarded on the date that dialysis was initiated. Because of this, patients often think they must start dialysis in order to earn waitlist credit.

To prevent incorrect assumptions and encourage proactive self-advocacy, educational curriculums must incorporate current waitlist timelines and a clear understanding of how the kidney allocation system works.4

Medicare ESRD restrictions also causes financial challenges. This occurs when ESRD Medicare coverage is limited to three years for medications post-transplant. Yet, if a transplant recipient loses their coverage, and subsequently can’t afford their medications, their transplanted kidney will reject. When a kidney rejects and cannot be saved, the patient requires dialysis to survive.  Here, everyone loses. However, patients, donors and transplant centers are not the only ones who lose. The government also loses.

For years we have known that a kidney transplant costs less than dialysis, beginning post-transplant year two. A recent Health and Human Services study reconfirmed this belief by showing a government savings of $73 million over a decade.3  [These numbers were computed by showing the first-year costs of getting a transplant to be roughly $131,000, with ongoing medication costs estimated under $3,400 annually]. These calculations present a huge savings after year two.

When you consider Medicare covers $90,000 per year for each dialysis patient (for as long as they need dialysis), you can quickly equate the financial gain from securing the longevity of each transplant performed.

Conclusion  

While preemptive transplantation is the preferred end-stage choice for renal replacement therapy, it continues to be vastly underutilized. Communicating preemptive transplant benefits in earlier stages of disease (by eliciting discussions as early as eGFR 59—and initiating referrals at eGFR 25), could effectively remove the bulk of barriers for those who deserve a better and longer life.

Helping patients understand the benefits gained in PKT is essential for increasing patient interest and desire. Teaching patients to communicate their need and search for potential donors in earlier stages of disease will also ensure they get a fair chance to achieve this goal. Removing financial disincentives to donation by adding protections will further assist the profession’s quest to help patients thrive—not just survive.

Now is the time to encourage preemptive transplant opportunities and position PKT education as a moral imperative and critical link for advancing optimal outcomes. Now is the time to revive the profession’s Hippocratic oath to do no harm.

It’s time to do more good.  

 

 

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About the Author

Risa Simon is the founder and CEO of Simon Says Seminars, inc., TransplantFirst Academy and TransplantStrong. As an immensely grateful preemptive (live-donor) kidney transplant recipient, she’s giving back to empower others through her Donor-Seeker® Program, webinars,  coaching and mentoring—and self-help books: In Pursuit of a Better Life: The Ultimate Guide for Finding Living Kidney Donors; and Shift Your Fate: Life-Changing Wisdom for Proactive Kidney Patients. For more information contact:  mailto:risa@TransplantStrong.com

Extending Transplant Immunosuppression Coverage Saves Money

HHS reports a 73 Million Dollar Savings Over 10 Years, by extending immunosuppressive medication coverage for kidney transplant patients under Medicare

Kidney transplant recipients and donors reached a significant milestone with the release of new findings. On May 10, 2019, the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE) released an analysis that estimates extending coverage for immunosuppressive medications (for kidney transplant patients on Medicare) would save $73 million over 10 years

This is monumental news for the kidney and transplant community. ASPE has confirmed (through this analysis) what we’ve long known to be true—extending Medicare coverage for immunosuppressive medications would prolong the viability of transplanted kidneys while also saving Medicare money.

Let lawmakers know that you support the Comprehensive Immunosuppressive Drug Coverage for Kidney Transplant Patients Act—a bipartisan solution that protects and honors the organ donor’s gift and their recipient’s transplant, by extending drug coverage for the life of the transplant. Download PDF Fact Sheet.

Your voice can help extend immunosuppressive drug coverage.

Learn more now. Join Honor the Gift Campaign 

Celebrating New Law for Organ Donor Protections in Arizona

TransplantFirst Academy (TFA) takes great pride in bringing an initiative for Living Donor Protections to Arizona’s lawmaker’s ears. Thanks to passionate sponsors, Senators Carter and Brophy McGee, and Arizona’s lawmakers who voted in support of the bill for living organ donor protections, Gov. Ducey signed SB1100 into law last week.

TFA is grateful that living kidney donors in the state of Arizona now have protections that prohibit insurance companies from denying or limiting life insurance, disability and long-term care coverage—or charging higher premiums.

“We celebrate Senator Carter’s and Brophy McGee’s dedication, and Governor Ducey foresight for recognizing the importance of removing barriers to living organ donation,” said Risa Simon, president and CEO of TransplantFirst Academy. Simon proclaimed, “Our nation’s been blessed by the selfless humanitarianism of more than 153,000 living kidney donors who have donated a kidney to save a life—3,200 of whom donated to individuals in Arizona.”

Our nation’s kidney shortage puts the lives of 97,000 people at risk every year—1,800 whom reside in Arizona. The life-threatening wait for a kidney from a deceased donor takes about 5 years. There is no wait, other than qualifying tests and an open operating room, for a living donor to save a life.

Simon says, “Living kidney donors give their recipients hope for better tomorrow by allowing them to receive their transplant when they need it—and before they get any sicker. Recipients rejoice in any and all things that honor their gift of life. This achievement is surely one of them.”

Love is in the Legislative Air for Living Kidney Donors

finding kidney donors

As the TransplantFirst Academy (TFA) continues its advocacy projects to honor and protect living kidney donors, we’re reaching out to our local transplant community friends and partners to share some exciting policy updates:

Living Kidney Donors Day

As many of you know, our conversations over the last three years with Arizona State Representative, Heather Carter ushered in the concurrent proclamation resolution HCR 2042 to recognize Living Kidney Donor Day (LKDD). This year we will be celebrating LKDD in March from the floor of the State Senate, where we will recognize nearly 3,000 brave Arizonans who saved a life by donating one of their kidneys to someone in need. As the first state in the nation to achieve an awareness day for living kidney donors, we continue to be inspired by the handfuls of states that are following our lead. 

New! AZ Living Kidney Donor Protections –SB1100

Boosted by our LKDD victory, we’ve been using our voices to champion protections for living organ donors on a local level. Thanks to our team’s dedicated advocacy communications—and the remarkable efforts of now Senator Carter and colleague Brophy McGee, the State of Arizona Senate’s fifty-fourth legislature introduced AZ SB1100, with the goal of protecting living organ donors from unfair insurance practices.

Receiving a unanimous YES vote from the Senate floor last week, SB 1100 explicitly prohibits insurers that offer life, disability or long-term care insurance contracts from unfairly discriminating against living organ donors. These conditions include offering, covering and the price or conditions of an insurance policy based exclusively, and without additional actuarial risks, on that person’s status as a living organ donor. We consider this a huge win and invite you to join us as we celebrate this statewide victory. *Please spread the word to update living kidney donors and those considering donation.

New! FMLA Protections are Extended to Living Organ Donors 

We enthusiastically applaud the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) decision to extend, via the full and appropriate authority of the U.S. Secretary of Labor, FMLA protections to living donors. This action protects the jobs of living organ donors and covers time off work for surgery and recovery. Thanks to strong voices from TransplantFirst Academy (TFA), the American Association of Kidney Patients (AAKP) and stakeholder allies including the American Society of Nephrology (ASN), the American Society of Transplant Surgeons (ASTS), the American Society of Transplantation (AST), the Renal Physicians Association (RPA) and multiple other kidney related organizations, the Department of labor fully understood that this policy change was of critical importance and completely consistent with the original intent of the FMLA legislative sponsors. Learn more here: https://aakp.org/press-release/labor-secretary-acosta-earns-patient-praise-organ-donor-job-protections-eve-labor-day-weekend /   

Breaking News! Following the actions of the Executive Branch to extend FMLA coverage to living donors last Fall, a new bill to provide further protections to living donors was entered this week by Senators Gillibrand and Cotton, and U.S. Representative Herrera Beutler. Our allies and organizations are front and center, working with leaders in Congress to make certain additional protections are afforded to courageous living organ donors through the strength of legislative action. Please stay tuned to join these efforts by helping these leaders pass the bipartisan Living Donor Protection Act.  

Live-Donor Champion Programs

Webinars, workshops and how-to patient empowerment resources are sure to improve patient outcomes by expanding live-donor transplant opportunities. Please help us give a big shout out to The Transplant Institute at Banner University Medical Center, for their wildly successful (standing room only) Living Donor Kidney Transplant Education Days. We are deeply moved by their drive to be the first local center to champion an informed path to live-donor transplants for three consecutive years. It was my great honor to be invited back as their guest speaker, presenting alongside their distinguished group of surgeons, nurse coordinators, and social workers. Two words: Bravo Banner!     

On this day of love and recognition, we invite you to join us to celebrate these record-setting achievements. Fittingly, we also celebrate National Donors Day today—a perfect match for Valentine’s Day observance!

SB1100 Fact Sheet 

For more information, contact Risa Simon

Risa@TransplantFirst.org

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