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We Need to Preserve Equitable Access
to Critical Medication –

Pass the Kidney PATIENT Act Now!

Americans on dialysis need help from Congress to ensure they have access to much needed innovative treatments.

More than 100 stakeholders from patient advocacy groups, racial equity organizations, labor unions, and faith leaders wrote to Congress urging passage of the Kidney PATIENT Act (H.R. 5074 / S.4510) this year.

Americans who suffer from kidney failure, also called End Stage Renal Disease (ESRD), rely on medicines known as Phosphate Lowering Therapies (PLTs) to reduce their risk of death.

Disproportionate Impact on Minoritized Communities

ESRD is one of the starkest examples of racial and/or ethnic disparities in health. Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is one of the fastest-growing chronic health conditions among minoritized communities and is associated with substantially increased risks of kidney failure.

Black Americans suffer from the highest rates of ESRD and ESRD rates are nearly 35% higher among Hispanics compared with non-Hispanics.
(
Source: National Library of Medicine)

Black people make up just 13% of the U.S. population but account for 35% of Americans with kidney failure; they are nearly four times more likely than white people to develop it. (Source: National Kidney Foundation)

Serious Consequences for Kidney Patients

Unless Congress passes the Kidney PATIENT Act (H.R. 5074 / S.4510), patients will face new restrictions to much-needed PLTs because their coverage will be moved into the End Stage Renal Disease Prospective Payment System or “ESRD bundle” starting in 2025 which could result in serious consequences including:

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The Kidney PATIENT Act would delay CMS from adding PLTs to the ESRD bundle until January 1, 2027.

With your help, we can preserve access to quality care for patients on dialysis.

Lowering the Quality of Care: PLTs will be forced into a limited ESRD bundle budget where they will compete with other treatments for coverage, meaning some patients won’t have access to the drugs their doctors prescribe.

Worsening Health Inequities: A disproportionate number of patients on dialysis are from minority, rural, and low-income communities and moving coverage for PLTs into the ESRD bundle will cause anticipated restrictions on needed treatment and higher out-of-pocket costs.

PAID FOR BY NATIONAL MINORITY QUALITY FORUM ACTION NETWORK

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