Stories from the dialysis comunity across the globe.
American Samoa dialysis unit reopens - Radio New Zealand
Dialysis patient
Photo: AFP
The Dialysis Unit at American Samoa's LBJ Hospital has reopened after a three-day closure.
A new supply of the Naturalyte Liquid Bicarbonate solution used in dialysis treatment, arrived on on Friday afternoon and the unit began treating patients as soon as the supplies were delivered from the airport to the hospital.
A recall by the solutions manufacturer resulted in the closure of the facility on Wednesday last week.
A military aircraft is scheduled to arrive today with the rest of the bicarb solution shipment.
The Dialysis Unit's manager says there have been no complaints or any reported incidents during the unit's closure.
Medicare Coordination of Benefits: Who'll Pay For Your Healthcare? - Motley Fool
Image: Medicare.gov.
Medicare is an essential program for those 65 or older, with tens of millions of Americans taking advantage of the program to help pay for their healthcare. What many people don't realize, however, is that Medicare doesn't cover all of your costs. If you have other healthcare coverage, the Medicare coordination of benefits rules kick in to establish whether Medicare or your other coverage will be the first one on the hook to pay your healthcare expenses.
The types of other coverage you can have For many Americans, Medicare is the only program that helps cover medical expenses after you retire. However, there are many situations in which you might have both Medicare and another benefit provider potentially covering the same healthcare expenses.
The most common situation involves those who have coverage through an employer health plan, either because they're still working after age 65 or because their spouse's plan covers them. Alternatively, some employers provide retiree health insurance benefits to former workers. If you have low income and limited financial resources, you might qualify for Medicaid as well as Medicare coverage. Veterans and those who are covered under the military's TRICARE health and medical program can also qualify for Medicare, and if you've been in an accident covered by liability insurance or suffered an injury or illness that workers' compensation covers, those benefits can help pay medical costs related to your condition.
Who pays first? The big question with coordination of benefits when you have multiple sources of coverage is who's responsible for paying first. The answer depends on the particular situation, with Medicare sometimes being the primary payer and sometimes being a secondary payer.
Some coordination of benefits situations are quite straightforward. For instance, those who have both Medicare and Medicaid always have Medicare as the primary payer. Medicaid benefits cover gaps that Medicare doesn't pay for. Similarly, in interacting with veterans' or TRICARE benefits, Medicare pays for the services it covers, while veterans' coverage pays for services authorized by the Veterans' Administration, and TRICARE pays for services from military hospitals and other federal providers. If you have COBRA coverage, it almost always pays second after Medicare.
For accident or workers' compensation claims, Medicare always takes a secondary role. The program waits to see what services a liability or no-fault insurance provider or workers' compensation benefits will pay. Typically, there's nothing left for Medicare to cover after that happens, but sometimes, Medicare will make conditional payments if an award or settlement hasn't yet been determined.
The toughest situation: group health coverage The most complicated coordination of benefits situations involve employer-provided health insurance. If the reason you have coverage is that you or your spouse still works, then the big question is how large an employer you work for. For employers with 20 or more employees, the group health plan is the primary payer, with Medicare taking a secondary role. Smaller employers, though, Medicare takes the primary role, leaving the group health plan as secondary payer.
A similar distinction exists for those who are disabled and entitled to Medicare. For employers with 100 or more employees, the group health plan pays first before Medicare. For smaller employers, though, Medicare becomes the primary payer.
By contrast, if the reason you have coverage is that your former employer has given you retiree coverage, Medicare always becomes the primary payer. Your retiree coverage pays second.
Finally, some special situations apply to those with end-stage renal disease. For the first 30 months of eligibility for Medicare because of ESRD, a group health plan or COBRA coverage is the primary payer, with Medicare paying second. After 30 months, though, Medicare assumes the primary role, with other coverage become the secondary payer.
Medicare can be a complex program even when it's the only program helping you with your healthcare costs. If you have other coverage as well, you can't afford notto know how Medicare's coordination of benefits rules apply to you. Otherwise, you could end up with a nasty surprise in discovering any gaps in your overall healthcare coverage.
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Dialysis fundraiser brings cars, families together - Marion Star
Eight-year-old Brayden Roberts peers into the window of a Ohio Historical vehicle during the Cruisin' for Dialysis car show on Center Street on Saturday. (Photo: Matthew Hatcher, Matthew Hatcher/ The Marion Star) Attendees to the Cruisin' for Dialysis car show walk down center street and admire the collection of antique and unique vehicles brought to Center Street in downtown Marion from all over Ohio. (Photo: Matthew Hatcher, Matthew Hatcher/ The Marion Star) On Saturday, June 6 Center Street in downtown Marion was flooded with antique and unique cars for the Cruisin' for Dialysis car show. (Photo: Matthew Hatcher, Matthew Hatcher/ The Marion Star) On Saturday, June 6 Center Street in downtown Marion was flooded with antique and unique cars for the Cruisin' for Dialysis car show. (Photo: Matthew Hatcher, Matthew Hatcher/ The Marion Star) On Saturday, June 6 Center Street in downtown Marion was flooded with antique and unique cars for the Cruisin' for Dialysis car show. (Photo: Matthew Hatcher, Matthew Hatcher/ The Marion Star) On Saturday, June 6 Center Street in downtown Marion was flooded with antique and unique cars for the Cruisin' for Dialysis car show. (Photo: Matthew Hatcher, Matthew Hatcher/ The Marion Star) On Saturday, June 6 Center Street in downtown Marion was flooded with antique and unique cars for the Cruisin' for Dialysis car show. (Photo: Matthew Hatcher, Matthew Hatcher/ The Marion Star) On Saturday, June 6 Center Street in downtown Marion was flooded with antique and unique cars for the Cruisin' for Dialysis car show. (Photo: Matthew Hatcher, Matthew Hatcher/ The Marion Star) On Saturday, June 6 Center Street in downtown Marion was flooded with antique and unique cars for the Cruisin' for Dialysis car show. (Photo: Matthew Hatcher, Matthew Hatcher/ The Marion Star) On Saturday, June 6 Center Street in downtown Marion was flooded with antique and unique cars for the Cruisin' for Dialysis car show. (Photo: Matthew Hatcher, Matthew Hatcher/ The Marion Star) 0On Saturday, June 6 Center Street in downtown Marion was flooded with antique and unique cars for the Cruisin' for Dialysis car show. (Photo: Matthew Hatcher, Matthew Hatcher/ The Marion Star) 1On Saturday, June 6 Center Street in downtown Marion was flooded with antique and unique cars for the Cruisin' for Dialysis car show. (Photo: Matthew Hatcher, Matthew Hatcher/ The Marion Star) 2On Saturday, June 6 Center Street in downtown Marion was flooded with antique and unique cars for the Cruisin' for Dialysis car show. (Photo: Matthew Hatcher, Matthew Hatcher/ The Marion Star) 3On Saturday, June 6 Center Street in downtown Marion was flooded with antique and unique cars for the Cruisin' for Dialysis car show. (Photo: Matthew Hatcher, Matthew Hatcher/ The Marion Star) 4On Saturday, June 6 Center Street in downtown Marion was flooded with antique and unique cars for the Cruisin' for Dialysis car show. (Photo: Matthew Hatcher, Matthew Hatcher/ The Marion Star) 5On Saturday, June 6 Center Street in downtown Marion was flooded with antique and unique cars for the Cruisin' for Dialysis car show. (Photo: Matthew Hatcher, Matthew Hatcher/ The Marion Star) 6On Saturday, June 6 Center Street in downtown Marion was flooded with antique and unique cars for the Cruisin' for Dialysis car show. (Photo: Matthew Hatcher, Matthew Hatcher/ The Marion Star) 7On Saturday, June 6 Center Street in downtown Marion was flooded with antique and unique cars for the Cruisin' for Dialysis car show. (Photo: Matthew Hatcher, Matthew Hatcher/ The Marion Star) 8On Saturday, June 6 Center Street in downtown Marion was flooded with antique and unique cars for the Cruisin' for Dialysis car show. (Photo: Matthew Hatcher, Matthew Hatcher/ The Marion Star) 9On Saturday, June 6 Center Street in downtown Marion was flooded with antique and unique cars for the Cruisin' for Dialysis car show. (Photo: Matthew Hatcher, Matthew Hatcher/ The Marion Star) 0On Saturday, June 6 Center Street in downtown Marion was flooded with antique and unique cars for the Cruisin' for Dialysis car show. (Photo: Matthew Hatcher, Matthew Hatcher/ The Marion Star) 1(Left to right) Brothers Scott and Kearney McEldowney stand next to their father Larry’s Corvette. Larry and Pam McEldowney, Scott and Kearney’s parents, supported Cruisin’ for Dialysis until their deaths and now the brothers carry on the tradition. (Photo: Spenser Hickey, Spenser Hickey/ The Marion Star) 2On Saturday, June 6 Center Street in downtown Marion was flooded with antique and unique cars for the Cruisin' for Dialysis car show. (Photo: Matthew Hatcher, Matthew Hatcher/ The Marion Star)
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Success Found in Easing Renal Fibrosis in Type 2 Diabetes - MD Magazine
Approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) just over 4 years ago, linagliptin (Tradjenta) can help protect against renal injury in patients with type 2 diabetes.
According to a team led by Vadim V. Klimontov, MD, PhD, it was recently suggested that dipeptidyl peptidase (DPP)-4 inhibitors, like linagliptin, reduce renal fibrosis and diabetic nephropathy progression. The researchers observed the drug’s role in any kidney changes. The findings will be displayed in a poster session on June 6 at the American Diabetes Association 75th Scientific Sessions in Boston, MA.
For 8 weeks, 8-week-old male diabetic mice were treated with 10 mg/kg of linagliptin each day. After analyzing the renal structures with light and electron microscopic images, the team was able to identify the changes.
“The number of podocyte foot processes was increased (p=0.007), and the number of endothelial fenestrae in glomerular capillaries tended to be increased (p=0.1) on linagliptin treatment,” the authors confirmed.
On average the treated mice experienced a 37.4% mesangial expansion, based on fractional mesangial volume. In addition, the medication diminished the width of the basal membrane of the proximal tubules to a great extent.
“The data from the current study demonstrate that DPP-4 inhibitor linagliptin ameliorates renal fibrosis and podocyte injury in a model of type 2 diabetic nephropathy,” the study concluded.
A public notice posted on one of the side doors of the Dialysis Clinic informs patients that due to problems with its dialysis solutions, treatments are been put on hold at the LBJ Medical Center, in Fagaalu, American Samoa on Friday, June 5, 2015. Residents who require dialysis were in their third day without the vital treatment Friday after a product recall closed their clinic, but so far none have sought emergency medical attention, the U.S. territory's only hospital said. Until Saturday, there are no other options for dialysis patients on the island with a population of about 55,000, roughly 2,300 miles south of Hawaii. (AP Photo/Fili Sagapolutele)
PAGO PAGO, American Samoa - American Samoa's only dialysis clinic has reopened after a product recall forced it to close for two days.
LBJ Medical Center said the clinic reopened at 4 p.m. Friday and began treating patients who require dialysis. The clinic shut down Wednesday after the hospital learned of a recall of a solution used in its machines. A fresh supply arrived to the island around 2 p.m. Friday. The clinic had been scheduled to reopen at 1 a.m. Saturday.
Those being treated Friday to Sunday are patients who had appointments scheduled for Wednesday through Saturday. Regularly scheduled appointments are expected to resume Monday.
"Those who came in say that they knew that the cargo flight had landed and decided to come to the hospital — taking their chances that the clinic will open thereafter," said dialysis unit nurse manager Olita Tafiti. "I guess word got out quickly that the shipment did in fact arrive on island."
Tafiti said three dialysis patients admitted themselves to the emergency room early Friday afternoon, and they were the first to get treatment when the clinic opened.
Until Friday, there were no other options for dialysis patients on the island with a population of about 55,000, roughly 2,300 miles south of Hawaii.
The recalled solution was from off-island supplier Fresenius Medical Care. Its North American headquarters is in Waltham, Massachusetts.
The recall occurred after sample testing showed the substance — NaturaLyte Liquid Bicarbonate Concentrate — might eventually develop bacteria levels that exceed acceptable limits, Fresenius spokesman Jon Stone said.
The company expedited the shipment of replacement liquid bicarbonate to American Samoa, Stone said.
How long a patient can safely go without dialysis depends on factors such as health condition and age, said Dr. Anjay Rastogi, director the dialysis program at the University of California, Los Angeles.
Generally, patients require the treatment three times a week, with some cases requiring four treatments, Rastogi said. Some patients can go a week without dialysis, but some with no kidney function can go only three or four days, he said.
"The short end of it, it's very time-sensitive," Rastogi said, adding he's especially concerned about those who might not have had dialysis since Monday.
He noted any contamination in the solution used for dialysis could be fatal.
Another shipment is due to arrive Friday night from Honolulu on Hawaiian Airlines, the only carrier connecting American Samoa to the U.S.
Additionally, a U.S. military flight is scheduled to arrive Monday afternoon from Honolulu with the rest of the supplies, Tafiti said.
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Associated Press writer Jennifer Sinco Kelleher in Honolulu contributed to this report.