1/14
Meet Hilda. I was one of her doctors. When she died, she left 2 sons behind. My grief about her situation brought anger and then determination.

A #tweetorial on outcomes, advocacy, and policy in dialysis access for undocumented immigrants.

#medtwitter #nephtwitter #NSMC
2/14
Hilda suffered along with the other 80 undocumented immigrants with kidney failure, who in Colorado could only receive dialysis every 6 to 7 days when at the brink of death (=’emergency dialysis’).

https://www.journalofhospitalmedicine.com/jhospmed/article/212344/hospital-medicine/dialysis-undocumented-driving-policy-change-data

Illustration @NathanAGray
4/14
What is the provision of dialysis for undocumented immigrants with kidney failure like in your state?
6/14
We began research...
Compared to undocumented immigrants that received scheduled 3x/wk dialysis, those receiving emergency dialysis have a:

Mortality that is 5-fold worse at 1 yr: https://ja.ma/2CBsAFf 

Mortality that is 14-fold worse at 5 yrs:
https://ja.ma/2Q4RwYI 
7/14
Our qualitative study of patients found physical & psychosocial distress due to:

- symptom accumulation
- being turned away from treatment (despite being ill) due to triage by lab values
- the perceived imminence of death
- no access to transplant
https://ja.ma/2E2ogjg 
8/14
We found that emergency dialysis is hard on clinicians too:

Led to burnout due to:
- witnessing needless suffering & high mortality
- moral distress because care is reflective of immigration status

https://www.acpjournals.org/doi/10.7326/M18-0400#.Xz3msJYFFNk.twitter
10/14
Comparing utilization/costs between undocumented immigrants that receive emergency dialysis vs 3x/week scheduled dialysis:

- 5 fewer ED visits per month
- 1.6 fewer hospital days per 6 month
- savings of $6000 per person per month
https://ja.ma/3aA9gVG 
@OanhKieuNguyen
11/14
What’s the solution?

EMTALA- A federal law allowing Emergency Medicaid that specifies that hospitals provide emergency services to anyone w/an emergency medical condition.

As of now, CMS provides no subregulatory guidance on the definition of emergency medical condition
12/14
States can define what constitutes an emergency medical condition.

On Feb 1, 2019, guided by our research, Colorado Medicaid opted to include kidney failure in the definition of an ‘emergency medical condition’ expanding access to scheduled dialysis to the uninsured.
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