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More dialysis patients living in poor neighborhoods

Date:
June 15, 2015
Source:
Loyola University Health System
Summary:
The percentage of adults beginning kidney dialysis who lived in zip codes with high poverty rates increased from 27.4 percent during the 1995-2004 time period to 34 percent in 2005-2010.
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Poverty is known to be a strong risk factor for end-stage kidney disease. Now, a first of-its-kind study has found that the association between poverty and kidney disease changes over time.

The percentage of adults beginning kidney dialysis who lived in zip codes with high poverty rates increased from 27.4 percent during the 1995-2004 time period to 34 percent in 2005-2010.

The study, by corresponding author Holly Kramer, MD, MPH and colleagues at Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine, is published in the journal Hemodialysis International. Researchers examined data from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, as supplied by the US Renal Data System.

The Renal Data System does not provide data on incomes of individual dialysis patients. So researchers instead examined whether an individual patient lived in a poverty area, defined as a zip code in which at least 20 percent of the population lives below the federal poverty line.

The study demonstrated that, compared with the general population, adults beginning dialysis are more likely to be living in a poor zip code: 27.4 percent of adults beginning dialysis in 1995-2004 lived in poor zip codes, compared with 10.9 percent of the general population; the corresponding figures for 2005-2010 were 34 percent and 12.5 percent.

It remains unclear why living in a poor zip code is linked to end stage kidney disease. Some possibilities include access to health care, environmental toxin exposures that are more likely in poverty areas and individual lifestyle factors, researchers wrote.

Future studies of end stage kidney disease patients should examine tends over time in poverty at the individual level and in smaller geographic areas, such as census tracts, Dr. Kramer and colleagues wrote.

"The collection of such data may help track national and local trends in poverty status and be used to develop policies for improving health outcomes and disease prevention," they wrote.

Dr. Kramer, a kidney specialist, is an associate professor in the departments of Medicine and Public Health Sciences of Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine. Co-authors are Bridget H. Garrity, MPH (first author), Kavitha Vellanki, MD, David Leehey, MD, Julia Brown, MD and David A. Shoham, PhD.

The study is titled, "Time trends in the association of ESRD incidence with the areal-level poverty in the US population."


Story Source:

Materials provided by Loyola University Health System. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Bridget H. Garrity, Holly Kramer, Kavitha Vellanki, David Leehey, Julia Brown and David A. Shoham. Time trends in the association of ESRD incidence with area-level poverty in the US population. Hemodialysis International, June 2015 DOI: 10.1111/hdi.12325

Cite This Page:

Loyola University Health System. "More dialysis patients living in poor neighborhoods." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 15 June 2015. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/06/150615162902.htm>.
Loyola University Health System. (2015, June 15). More dialysis patients living in poor neighborhoods. ScienceDaily. Retrieved March 19, 2024 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/06/150615162902.htm
Loyola University Health System. "More dialysis patients living in poor neighborhoods." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/06/150615162902.htm (accessed March 19, 2024).

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