It doesn't look like pay-for-performance is going as well as hoped for. I'm reading Medicare wants to look at one lab measurement, which is better than another lab measurement they have been look at (going to KTV rather than URR).
But here is a comment about KTV:
"It makes very little sense to choose a tiny molecule that freely moves between cell walls as an index of how good dialysis is, when MOST of the molecules that need to be removed to keep you feeling your best are large and/or twisty and complex and much harder to get rid of.
Kind of like having a septic tank cleaned by siphoning off the liquid on top while leaving all of the SLUDGE at the bottom..."
http://forums.homedialysis.org/showthread.php/2528-A-Minimum-Outcomes-billHowever we aren't seeing anything that would encourage the LENGTH of treatment:
"We know that 3x/week short treatments (<4 hours) contribute to tens of thousands of needless deaths just in the U.S. So why is this the standard of care?
Why isn't there a minimum TIME requirement for treatments?."
http://forums.homedialysis.org/showthread.php/2528-A-Minimum-Outcomes-billBeth at Home Dialysis Central also had some good ideas about what should be looked at:
"In my opinion, there is a much better way to tell if patients are receiving optimal dialysis. Instead of using lab tests to measure what's in a a patients' blood, why not ask patients about their physical and mental functioning and how kidney disease affects their life, collect data on the percentage of pediatric patients that are in school, the percentage of working age patients who are working, the percentage of retirees who live active lives, and the percentage of patients who have correctable limitations that have not been addressed?"
http://forums.homedialysis.org/showthread.php/2528-A-Minimum-Outcomes-bill