Abstract

Introduction Broader adoption of home dialysis could lead to considerable cost savings for health services. Globally, however, uptake remains low. The aim of this study was to describe patient and caregiver perspectives of the economic considerations that influence dialysis modality choice, and elicit policy‐relevant recommendations. Methods Semistructured interviews with predialysis or dialysis patients and their caregivers, at three hospitals in New Zealand. Interview transcripts were analyzed thematically. Findings 43 patients and 9 caregivers (total n = 52) participated. The three themes related to economic considerations were: (i) productivity losses associated with changes in employment; (ii) the need for personal subsidization of home dialysis expenses; and (iii) the role of socio‐economic disadvantage as a barrier to home dialysis. Patients weighed the flexibility of home dialysis which allowed them to remain employed, against time required for training and out‐of‐pocket costs. Patients saw the lack of reimbursement of home dialysis costs as unjust and suggested that reimbursement would incentivize home dialysis uptake. Social disadvantage was a barrier to home dialysis as patients’ housing was often unsuitable; they could not afford the additional treatment costs. Home hemodialysis was considered to have the highest out‐of‐pocket costs and was sometimes avoided for this reason. Discussion Our data suggests that economic considerations underpin the choices patients make about dialysis treatments, however these are rarely reported. To promote home dialysis, strategies to improve employment retention and housing, and to minimize out‐of‐pocket costs, need to be addressed directly by healthcare providers and payers.

Highlights

  • As the financial burden of treatment of end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) on global health systems increases [1,2,3], policymakers are challenged to provide widely-available, affordable, and quality dialysis

  • The three themes related to economic considerations were: (i) productivity losses associated with changes in employment; (ii) the need for personal subsidization of home dialysis expenses; and (iii) the role of socioeconomic disadvantage as a barrier to home dialysis

  • Subthemes included: Patients valued personal and household productivity when making decisions about dialysis treatment. They weighed the flexibility of home dialysis which allowed them to remain employed, against the time required for home dialysis training and the amount of required patient contribution

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Summary

Objective

To describe patient and caregiver perspectives about the economic considerations that influence decisions about dialysis treatment options. Design, Setting, and Participants: Semi-structured interviews with pre-dialysis or dialysis patients and their caregivers, conducted between July 2014 and January 2015 at 3 hospitals in New Zealand. Main outcome measures: Economic considerations that influenced patients’ or caregivers’ choices about dialysis treatment

Results
Conclusions
Introduction
Methods
Socio-economic disadvantage
Conclusion
Productivity losses related to changes in employment
Subsidizing the costs of home dialysis

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