Manns Braden, McKenzie Susan Q, Au Flora, Gignac Pamela M, Geller Lawrence Ian
Departments of Medicine and Community Health Sciences, Libin Cardiovascular Institute and O'Brien Institute of Public Health, University of Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Foothills Medical Centre, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Can J Kidney Health Dis. 2017 Apr 17;4:2054358117703986. doi: 10.1177/2054358117703986. eCollection 2017.
Many working-age individuals with advanced chronic kidney disease (CKD) are unable to work, or are only able to work at a reduced capacity and/or with a reduction in time at work, and receive disability payments, either from the Canadian government or from private insurers, but the magnitude of those payments is unknown.
The objective of this study was to estimate Canada Pension Plan Disability Benefit and private disability insurance benefits paid to Canadians with advanced kidney failure, and how feasible improvements in prevention, identification, and early treatment of CKD and increased use of kidney transplantation might mitigate those costs.
This study used an analytical model combining Canadian data from various sources.
This study included all patients with advanced CKD in Canada, including those with estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) <30 mL/min/m and those on dialysis.
We combined disability estimates from a provincial kidney care program with the prevalence of advanced CKD and estimated disability payments from the Canada Pension Plan and private insurance plans to estimate overall disability benefit payments for Canadians with advanced CKD.
We estimate that Canadians with advanced kidney failure are receiving disability benefit payments of at least Can$217 million annually. These estimates are sensitive to the proportion of individuals with advanced kidney disease who are unable to work, and plausible variation in this estimate could mean patients with advanced kidney disease are receiving up to Can$260 million per year. Feasible strategies to reduce the proportion of individuals with advanced kidney disease, either through prevention, delay or reduction in severity, or increasing the rate of transplantation, could result in reductions in the cost of Canada Pension Plan and private disability insurance payments by Can$13.8 million per year within 5 years.
This study does not estimate how CKD prevention or increasing the rate of kidney transplantation might influence health care cost savings more broadly, and does not include the cost to provincial governments for programs that provide income for individuals without private insurance and who do not qualify for Canada Pension Plan disability payments.
Private disability insurance providers and federal government programs incur high costs related to individuals with advanced kidney failure, highlighting the significance of kidney disease not only to patients, and their families, but also to these other important stakeholders. Improvements in care of individuals with kidney disease could reduce these costs.
许多患有晚期慢性肾脏病(CKD)的工作年龄个体无法工作,或只能以较低能力工作和/或减少工作时间,并从加拿大政府或私人保险公司领取残疾津贴,但这些津贴的数额尚不清楚。
本研究的目的是估计支付给患有晚期肾衰竭的加拿大人的加拿大养老金计划残疾福利和私人残疾保险福利,以及改善CKD的预防、识别和早期治疗以及增加肾移植的使用在多大程度上可能降低这些成本。
本研究使用了一个结合来自各种来源的加拿大数据的分析模型。
本研究纳入了加拿大所有患有晚期CKD的患者,包括估计肾小球滤过率(eGFR)<30 mL/min/m²的患者和接受透析的患者。
我们将一个省级肾脏护理项目的残疾估计数与晚期CKD的患病率以及加拿大养老金计划和私人保险计划的估计残疾津贴相结合,以估计患有晚期CKD的加拿大人的总体残疾福利支付。
我们估计,患有晚期肾衰竭的加拿大人每年获得的残疾福利支付至少为2.17亿加元。这些估计数对患有晚期肾病而无法工作的个体比例很敏感,这一估计数的合理变化可能意味着患有晚期肾病的患者每年获得高达2.6亿加元。通过预防、延缓或减轻病情严重程度或提高移植率来降低患有晚期肾病个体比例的可行策略,可能会在5年内使加拿大养老金计划和私人残疾保险支付成本每年减少1380万加元。
本研究没有估计CKD预防或提高肾移植率可能在更广泛范围内如何影响医疗保健成本节约,也没有包括省级政府为没有私人保险且不符合加拿大养老金计划残疾支付资格的个人提供收入的项目的成本。
私人残疾保险提供商和联邦政府项目因患有晚期肾衰竭的个体而产生高昂成本,这凸显了肾病不仅对患者及其家庭,而且对其他重要利益相关者的重要性。改善肾病患者的护理可以降低这些成本。