{"id":10014,"date":"2022-10-31T19:55:50","date_gmt":"2022-10-31T19:55:50","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/ultimatehealthreport.com\/californias-proposition-29-leaves-dialysis-patients-feeling-unsure\/"},"modified":"2022-10-31T19:55:50","modified_gmt":"2022-10-31T19:55:50","slug":"californias-proposition-29-leaves-dialysis-patients-feeling-unsure","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ultimatehealthreport.com\/californias-proposition-29-leaves-dialysis-patients-feeling-unsure\/","title":{"rendered":"California’s Proposition 29 leaves dialysis patients feeling unsure"},"content":{"rendered":"


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ELK GROVE \u2014 Toni Sherwin is actually looking forward to the procedure that will relocate her dialysis port from her chest to her arm, which will be easier to keep dry. Since she started dialysis in February \u2014 as part of blood cancer treatment \u2014 she has washed her hair in the sink and stayed out of her pool to prevent water from getting into the port.<\/p>\n

Three times a week, Sherwin, 71, drives to a dialysis clinic in Elk Grove, California, the suburb south of Sacramento where she lives, and lies tethered to a machine for about four hours while it filters her blood. The treatment exhausts her, but she feels well cared for and knows the clinic workers will call the police if she doesn\u2019t show up for an appointment and they can\u2019t get in touch with her directly.<\/p>\n

\u201cThey don\u2019t play games,\u201d said Sherwin.<\/p>\n

Sherwin fears her access to the clinic is in jeopardy. A sign in the clinic\u2019s window tells patients and visitors to vote \u201cno\u201d on Proposition 29, the third statewide dialysis initiative in five years. It would impose new requirements on dialysis clinics, such as requiring a doctor to be on hand during treatments.<\/p>\n

She and other California voters have also been bombarded by TV ads, in which patients in wheelchairs and doctors in scrubs warn that \u201c29 would shut down dialysis clinics throughout California.\u201d<\/p>\n

\u201cWe\u2019re terrified,\u201d said Sherwin. \u201cIf they stop it, where are we going to go? We just die.\u201d<\/p>\n

Sherwin is among roughly 80,000 Californians who rely on 650 dialysis clinics tucked into strip malls and medical centers around the state. Patients arrive in medical transport vans, minivans, and the occasional ride-hailing vehicle and are often too tired and hungry after treatment to drive themselves home. They drag duffel bags and pillows into clinics, prepared to sit for four or five hours at a time, typically three days a week, as their blood is cleaned and filtered through a machine because their kidneys can no longer perform those functions.<\/p>\n

Proposition 29 would require clinics to report infections to the state and tell patients when doctors have a financial stake in a clinic, rules that are similar to existing federal regulations.<\/p>\n

The biggest flashpoint is the requirement to have a doctor, nurse practitioner, or physician assistant present at every clinic while patients are being treated.<\/p>\n

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Requiring a clinician on-site would increase each facility\u2019s costs by \u201cseveral hundred thousand dollars annually on average,\u201d according to an analysis by the nonpartisan state Legislative Analyst\u2019s Office. To deal with the additional costs, the analysis concluded, clinics have three options: negotiate higher rates with insurers, lose profits, or close facilities.<\/p>\n

The Service Employees International Union-United Healthcare Workers West, which is sponsoring Proposition 29, said reforms are necessary to keep patients safe during the physically arduous dialysis process. The union \u2014 which has tried but failed to organize dialysis workers \u2014 argues that the treatment is dangerous and that patients need access to highly trained medical professionals to deal with emergencies instead of relying on 911.<\/p>\n

The union was also behind the two previous dialysis ballot initiatives, which failed by wide margins. Proposition 8 in 2018 would have capped industry profits, while Proposition 23 in 2020 was nearly identical to this year\u2019s measure. Both broke records for campaign spending.<\/p>\n

The Proposition 29 opposition campaign, funded mostly by the dialysis industry, says keeping a doctor or nurse practitioner around at all times is both costly and unnecessary. Clinics employ registered nurses who check on patients and medical directors \u2014 physicians who oversee facilities but are often on-site only part time. About three quarters of California\u2019s dialysis clinics are owned or operated by two companies: DaVita and Fresenius Medical Care.<\/p>\n

So far, both sides have raised at least $94 million, according to the Los Angeles Times, with roughly 85% coming from DaVita and Fresenius.<\/p>\n

Joe Damian, 71, doesn\u2019t buy the claim that clinics would close if Proposition 29 passed. Of course, he said, he\u2019d feel more comfortable if a doctor were on-site when his wife, Yolanda, has her treatments. He also believes dialysis companies would continue to make money hand over fist.<\/p>\n

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\u201cHow could it not be better?\u201d he asked. \u201cThey just don\u2019t want to give up any of their profits.\u201d<\/p>\n

Damian drives his wife to her treatments in Elk Grove. He understands why other patients and their families are worried about clinics closing but thinks the industry is fearmongering.<\/p>\n

\u201cClosing facilities is a threat they\u2019ll never do,\u201d he said. \u201cWhy would they close a moneymaking business?\u201d<\/p>\n

Proposition 29 includes provisions intended to protect against clinic closures, such as requiring facilities to get approval from the state before they end or reduce services, but opponents argue the provisions won\u2019t hold up in court.<\/p>\n

Nearly all the patients interviewed going to or from dialysis appointments at five Sacramento-area clinics had witnessed workers call 911 for another patient. Most said the emergencies had been handled well by the workers and emergency personnel. Overall, they said, they felt the dialysis clinics took good care of them.<\/p>\n

The majority of patients had internalized the language of the opposition ads that warned of clinic closures.<\/p>\n

Norbie Kumagai, 65, spent last Thanksgiving at University of California-Davis Medical Center, and his family was told it was time to say goodbye. But Kumagai, who has stage 4 kidney disease and high blood pressure, pulled through and had to wait months for a dialysis chair to open up at a clinic in West Sacramento, about 13 miles from his home in Davis.<\/p>\n

Kumagai generally agrees that the dialysis industry needs reforms. For instance, he said, he\u2019d like the technicians who help him each week to get pay raises.<\/p>\n

But he\u2019s worried about what Proposition 29 might mean for the treatments that keep him alive.<\/p>\n

\u201cI\u2019ve told my friends and neighbors I\u2019m scared to death if it passes,\u201d Kumagai said. \u201cThis facility will probably close.\u201d<\/p>\n

This story was produced by KHN, which publishes California Healthline, an editorially independent service of the California Health Care Foundation.<\/em><\/p>\n

Kaiser Health News is a national health policy news service. It is an editorially independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation which is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.<\/em><\/p>\n<\/div>\n


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