Advancing American Kidney Health is an initiative to improve kidney care in the United States which was launched through Executive Order by President Donald Trump on July 10, 2019.[1]
In 2019, chronic kidney disease was estimated to have a prevalence of more than 15 percent among adults in the United States, and nearly 100,000 Americans were waiting for a kidney transplant.[2][3] The purpose of the Advancing American Kidney Health initiative was to improve this situation and thereby reduce healthcare costs[4] by encouraging preventive modes of care, creating incentives to increase the proportion of home dialysis treatment and making kidney transplants available to more patients.
Goals
The initiative stated three explicit goals: to ensure that 80 percent of patients newly diagnosed with kidney failure would either receive a transplant or at-home dialysis by 2025; to reduce the instances of kidney failure by one fourth by 2030; to make twice as many kidneys available for transplant by 2030.[5] The means to achieve the goals would include a restructuring of payment models within Medicare, thus making home therapy more financially attractive and in-center therapy less so.[3]
Public reception
The initiative was generally well received at the time of launch,[6] with patient advocates and officials within the United States Department of Health and Human Services commenting that the existing health system for kidney care was overdue for reform and had failed to create incentives for early detection and prevention.[7] The implementation of reforms was slowed down by the impact of the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic.[4]
References
- ↑ "Executive Order on Advancing American Kidney Health". whitehouse.gov – via National Archives.
- ↑ "Chronic Kidney Disease in the United States, 2019". www.cdc.gov. 13 March 2019.
- 1 2 "The Advancing American Kidney Health Initiative Payment Models, Public Awareness Initiative, and Incentives for Innovation | Kidney News". www.kidneynews.org.
- 1 2 "HHS Kidney Initiative: Reflecting On The Year One Milestone". The National Law Review.
- ↑ "American Society of Nephrology | Advocacy & Public Policy - View Documents". www.asn-online.org.
- ↑ Abelson, Reed; Thomas, Katie (10 July 2019). "Trump Proposes Ways to Improve Care for Kidney Disease and Increase Transplants". The New York Times – via NYTimes.com.
- ↑ Diamond, Dan; Roubein, Rachel (8 July 2019). "Trump aims to shake up kidney care market". POLITICO.