Setting Up and Expanding a Home Dialysis Program: Is There a Recipe for Success?

Kidney360. 2020 May 1;1(6):569-579. doi: 10.34067/KID.0000662019. eCollection 2020 Jun 25.

Abstract

Home dialysis modalities remain significantly underused in the United States despite similar overall survival in the modalities, and recent incentives to expand these modalities. Although the absolute number of patients using home modalities has grown, the proportion compared to in-center hemodialysis (ICHD) continues to remain quite low. Well known barriers to home dialysis utilization exist, and an organized and team-based approach is required to overcome these barriers. Herein, we describe our efforts at growing our home dialysis program at a large academic medical center, with the proportion of home dialysis patients growing from 12% to 21% over the past 9 years. We prioritized individualized education for patients and better training for physicians, with the help of existing resources, aimed at better utilization of home modalities; an example includes dedicated dialysis education classes taught twice monthly by an experienced nurse practitioner, as well as the utilization of the dialysis educator from a dialysis provider for inpatient education of patients with CKD. The nephrology fellowship curriculum was restructured with emphasis on home modalities, and participation in annual home dialysis conferences has been encouraged. For timely placement and troubleshooting of access for dialysis, we followed a complementary team approach using surgeons and interventional radiologists and nephrologists, driven by a standardized protocol developed at UAB, and comanaged by our access coordinators. A team-based approach, with emphasis on staff engagement and leadership opportunities for dialysis nurses as well as collaborative efforts from a team of clinical nephrologists and the dialysis provider helped maintain efficiency, kindle growth, and provide consistently high-quality clinical care in the home program. Lastly, efforts at reducing burden of disease such as decreased number of monthly visits as well as using innovative strategies, such as telenephrology and assisted PD and HHD, were instrumental in reducing attrition.

Keywords: barriers to home dialysis; dialysis; home dialysis; home dialysis academy; home hemodialysis; modality education; peritoneal dialysis; telenephrology; urgent peritoneal dialysis.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Hemodialysis, Home / education
  • Humans
  • Kidney Failure, Chronic* / therapy
  • Nephrology* / education
  • Peritoneal Dialysis* / methods
  • Renal Dialysis
  • United States