American Kidney Fund Applauds Groundbreaking and Crucial Passage of Comprehensive Immunosuppressive Drug Coverage for Kidney Transplant Recipients By the U.S. House of Representatives
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The following statement may be attributed to
"The
"We applaud House leadership for including the immunosuppressive language in H.R. 2477, Beneficiary Enrollment Notification and Eligibility Simplification Act of 2019, or the BENES Act of 2019.
"AKF has worked tirelessly for years on this lifesaving legislation, which is more important during the COVID-19 pandemic than ever before. Millions of Americans have lost their jobs due to the coronavirus, and with their jobs, their employer-sponsored insurance. Kidney transplant recipients must maintain consistent health care coverage in order to afford their expensive immunosuppressive drugs--also known as anti-rejection drugs--or they face rejection of their transplanted organ and must go back on dialysis in order to survive.
"Individuals living with a kidney transplant must take immunosuppressive drugs to prevent their body from rejecting their kidney. Medicare covers immunosuppressive drugs for 36 months after the date of transplant surgery for end-stage renal disease (ESRD) beneficiaries under age 65, who are eligible for Medicare because of their ESRD status. After those three years, Medicare ends coverage for the individual and their needed medications. Kidney transplant patients who cannot find alternative health insurance and cannot afford to pay out-of-pocket for their immunosuppressive drugs will ultimately lose their kidney and must go back on dialysis, which makes them again eligible for Medicare.
"For Americans living with ESRD, transplants are usually the best and most desired treatment option. There are about 94,000 Americans currently waiting for a kidney transplant, and the wait time can be years. A transplanted kidney is immeasurably valuable to the recipient, their family and society. Patients who have a kidney transplant need to keep their transplant viable for as long as possible, and access to immunosuppressive drugs is essential to prevent rejection of the transplanted organ. According to the
"Ensuring that kidney transplant recipients can keep their kidneys is good public policy, as it also provides relief for taxpayers. On
"Passage of this legislation in the House is just the first step--the
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