Dialysis world news


83-year-old gives away one of his 'Formula One' kidneys - The Guardian

He has given blood 57 times, he is a volunteer driver for a local hospice, and now Nicholas Crace has scored a double first at the age of 83 – becoming the oldest living kidney donorin the UK and the oldest person ever to donate a kidney to a stranger.

The former charity director turned his thoughts to helping someone else in another way after his wife, Brigid, died last summer. "I cannot remember quite what put the idea of being a living kidney donor into my mind," said Crace, of Overton in Hampshire, "but in September 2011 I thought that it might be worth investigating. After all, I was in good health, had no dependants and had plenty of time at my disposal. I knew that 7,000 people are waiting for a kidney and that one person dies almost every day while waiting.

"I would have been very disappointed if I had been turned down. I was ideally placed to be a donor after the hospital had established that I was fit and had excellent kidneys. One can live perfectly happily with only one kidney – in fact some people are born with only one."

As he put it on BBC Radio 4's Today programme on Thursday, doctors discovered he had "Formula One kidneys" – good enough to have come from a 40-year-old.

Crace was aware of the difficulties faced by patients on dialysis – regular trips to hospital, a restricted diet and health problems. He said it was an easy decision to become a donor. "Giving a small part of me to someone else will make little difference to my life but a huge difference to someone else's. I was lucky to be in a position to help someone else less fortunate than myself."

Over a period of six months, he made 14 visits to Queen Alexandra hospital in Portsmouth – a round trip of nearly 100 miles – for tests, checks and a three-hour operation to remove a kidney. Within three days of the operation he was back mowing the lawn and riding his bike.

Sam Dutta, the surgeon who performed the operation, said: "We know from numerous studies that a living-donor kidney performs better, works quicker and lasts longer than one from a deceased donor. All the detrimental factors related to being on dialysis are completely taken care of by a good functioning kidney. An altruistic donor coming forward is an amazing thing for us. The recipient just gets a new lease of life."

Crace is one of a rare breed – just 100 people in the UK have donated a kidney while living, for someone they are never likely to know.

Altruistic kidney donation by a living donor was first carried out in 2006. Altruistic donors were "very special people", said Annabel Ferriman, chair of the charity Give a Kidney – One's Enough. "They have the imagination to understand the suffering that people go through on dialysis while waiting for a transplant and the courage and generosity to do something about it."

...

 
Team Care Lowers ESRD Costs - Renal Business Today

WASHINGTON—A pilot program focused on collaborative care may improve outcomes and reduce costs associated with end-stage renal disease (ESRD), researchers found.

Patients in the Medicare demonstration project met all Quality Incentive Program (QIP) metrics for much of the study, and by the second year of the program had significantly lower costs compared with fee-for-service patients, Allen Nissenson, MD, chief medical officer of DaVita in El Segundo, Calif., and colleagues reported at the National Kidney Foundation (NKF) meeting here.

The program was implemented in several DaVita dialysis centers in southern California, serving about 550 patients, and was conducted from 2008 to 2010. All patients had aggressive preventive care, management of comorbid conditions, and monitoring by a care manager throughout the entire program.

Nissenson said the program focused on integrating healthcare across various aspects of care, not just the dialysis units, and involved teams comprising clinicians, nurse practitioners, case managers, and pharmacists. In addition to medical management, the program also incorporated nutrition education, fluid management, and other components that made it a more holistic approach to care, he said.

DaVita received a single monthly payment per patient "to cover it all," Nissenson said. "It's sort of like the ultimate bundling."

He and his colleagues evaluated outcomes and costs associated with the demo project. They found that patients hit nine out of 11 QIP targets in the first half of 2008, and then hit all 11 targets after that point through 2010.

...

 
Research and Markets: United States Nephrology and Urology Devices Market ... - SunHerald.com
SunHerald.com
United States Nephrology and Urology Devices Market Outlook to 2018 - Incontinence Devices, Renal Dialysis Equipment and Lithotripters provides key market data on the United States Nephrology and Urology Devices market. The report provides value (USD ...
Belgium Nephrology and Urology Devices Market Outlook to 2018 - Incontinence

...

 
Liberty Dialysis Celebrates 1000th PD Patient - Renal Business Today

MERCER ISLAND, Wash.—Liberty Dialysis, owner and operator of more than 260 dialysis clinics nationwide, is celebrating its 1,000th patient to participate in its Peritoneal Dialysis (PD) program.

Liberty Dialysis is known for its strong commitment to home therapies for end-stage renal disease (ESRD) patients, making this a particularly special milestone for the company. The 1,000th PD patient was trained in just two weeks, by nephrology specialists at the Liberty affiliate INS Statesville clinic to perform PD treatment independently.

What is PD? Peritoneal dialysis ESRD patients to treat themselves at home, work and even while traveling. Like hemodialysis, PD is a way to remove waste products from the blood when the kidneys can no longer perform this function. During PD, a catheter attached to the patient's abdominal lining (peritoneum) delivers fluid (dialysate) to the blood vessels. This fluid flows into and out of the peritoneal space, performing the kidney's function.

...

 
New unit to treat dialysis patients - Harlow Star

Patients needing kidney dialysis services will soon be able to receive their treatment in Harlow.

A new unit is to be located in the town after the East and North Herts NHS Trust – which currenly runs satellite dialysis units in Luton and St Albans as well as services at the Lister Hospital in Stevenage – was awarded contracts for two new units, one in Harlow and the other in Bedford.

The contracts were agreed following a three-month consultation process by the Midlands and East Specialised Commission-ing Group during which views were sought from patients, clinicians and the public.

It is expected the new service will be up and running by January of next year.

The news has been welcomed by Harlow MP Robert Halfon, who said: “This is great news for kidney dialysis patients in the town who need to make regular journeys for their treatment. To have services on their doorstep will be of great benefit to them and their families.

“It proves the Government is investing in Harlow’s health services on top of the extra £24m that has already been allocated to our town.”

The bid by the East and North Herts NHS Trust was put forward by its renal dialysis team working closely with specialist private sector partner Diaverum UK.

Trust chief executive Nick Carver said: “For some time the clinical quality of our renal dialysis service has enjoyed an enviable national and international reputation, which helps to explain why they were chosen to develop this new unit in Harlow.

“It is also a tribute to how our clinical and non-clinical teams worked alongside each other in putting together a winning bid that ticked all the boxes for the commissioning group.”

Consultant Roger Greenwood said: “We are delighted that, after such a long wait, peoples in West Essex will now have access to local kidney dialysis units.

“We have 20 years of experience running similar NHS centres and are confident in providing excellent standards of care for renal dialysis patients.”

...

 
<< Start < Prev 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 Next > End >>

Page 377 of 2630
Share |
Copyright © 2024 Global Dialysis. All Rights Reserved.