Annals Internal Medicine, Author Interviews, Cost of Health Care, Kidney Disease / 22.05.2018
Lack of Dialysis Access for Undocumented Immigrants Stresses Patients and Providers
MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
Lilia Cervantes, M.D.
Internal Medicine, Hospitalist
Denver Health and Hospital Authority
Assistant Professor, Division of General Internal Medicine
Founder, Healthcare Interest Program and Health Equity Lecture Series
at Denver Health
University of Colorado Health Sciences Center
MedicalResearch.com: What is the background for this study? What are the main findings?
Response: For most undocumented immigrants with kidney failure in the U.S., access to hemodialysis is limited and they can only receive it when they are critically ill and near-death. This type of “emergency-only” hemodialysis is already known to be nearly 4-fold more costly, has 14-fold higher mortality rate, and leads to debilitating physical and psychosocial distress for these patients compared to those receiving regular hemodialysis.
This study shows that clinicians who are forced to provide this substandard care are also harmed. They experience moral distress, emotional exhaustion, and several other drives of professional burnout due to witnessing needless suffering and high mortality. (more…)