Influenza Vaccination Keeps Dialysis Patients Out of the Hospital
Skipping Flu Shot Increases Hospitalization Risk by up to 158 percent, According to Fresenius
Medical Care Study Presented at 2016 Kidney Week Meeting
Hemodialysis patients who skipped the influenza vaccine were significantly more likely to be hospitalized than those who were
vaccinated, suggests a three-year study of more than 150,000 kidney dialysis patients being presented today in Chicago at 2016
Kidney Week, the annual meeting of the American Society of Nephrology (ASN). The study is one of 66 abstracts authored by Fresenius Medical Care researchers, clinicians, and caregivers to be presented at the meeting and published in
the Abstract Supplement of Journal of the American Society of Nephrology (JASN).
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FMCNA Chief Medical Officer and Executive VP, Dr. Frank Maddux, receives his annual flu shot from Clinic Manager,
Margot Nelson, RN. (Credit: Fresenius Medical Care North America)
The study tracked kidney failure patients who were vaccinated against the flu, including at U.S. Fresenius Kidney Care dialysis
centers where they received their hemodialysis therapy. The percentage of Fresenius Kidney Care patients who opted for yearly
vaccination against the flu increased from 60 percent the first year of the study to 80 percent the third year. Fresenius Medical
Care North America is the premier health care company focused on providing the highest quality care to people with renal and other
chronic conditions.
“While almost everyone should be vaccinated against influenza, people with kidney failure who are on dialysis are at high risk
for complications if they get sick, which is why it is vital they get the flu vaccine every year,” said Nien Chen Li, MPH, MS, MA,
lead author of the study and biostatistician for Fresenius Medical Care. “We’re gratified to see that our patients are increasingly
choosing to be vaccinated.”
Like others with chronic illnesses, people with kidney failure are at higher risk for getting the flu. They also become sicker
if they do get the infection and may get dehydrated or develop pneumonia, leading to hospitalization. Additionally, many of them
have other risk factors, including diabetes and heart disease. Over a 30-year period, deaths from the flu ranged from 3,000 to
49,000 a year, according to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimates.
Fresenius Medical Care strongly encourages patients to receive flu vaccination and offers these vaccinations at its dialysis
centers. In the study, researchers tracked flu vaccination and hospitalization rates among 158,326 patients in 2013-2014; 202,793
in 2014-2015; and 220,203 in 2015-2016. Patients who skipped vaccination were 53 percent more likely to be hospitalized during the
flu season the first year, 87 percent more likely the second year and 158 percent more likely to be hospitalized the third
year.
“The results of this research suggest that aggressive programs to promote flu vaccination makes a significant difference in
keeping kidney patients healthy and out of the hospital,” said Dr. Frank Maddux, Fresenius Medical Care Chief Medical Officer and
Executive Vice President for Clinical and Scientific Affairs. “We make it easy for patients by offering the flu vaccine at the
clinic where they receive their care and explaining to them why the flu shot is important to their health. More and more patients
are taking advantage of these crisis-preventing vaccinations.”
More than 661,000 Americans have kidney failure, meaning their kidneys can no longer effectively filter their blood to get rid
of wastes and excess fluid. Of those with kidney failure, 468,000 are receiving dialysis, in which an artificial kidney (dialyzer)
filters blood and returns it to the body.
Recently, Fresenius Medical Care announced that its dialysis services business, Fresenius Kidney Care, achieved the country’s
largest number of top-rated Five-Star dialysis centers, based on the annual Dialysis Facility Compare Five-Star Quality Rating
System issued by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). The company has helped its patients live longer and spend
less time in the hospital, improving mortality rates and lowering the average time spent in a hospital setting by two-and-a-half
days. The flu vaccination program is part of this endeavor.
Fresenius Medical Care presents the results of its research at the ASN Kidney Week meeting each year to further the advancement
of the quality of renal care and improve patient outcomes. The general meeting is scheduled from Nov. 17-20 in Chicago and is
expected to attract more than 13,000 leading kidney professionals from around the world.
About Fresenius Medical Care North America
Fresenius Medical Care North America is the premier health care company focused on providing the highest quality care to people
with renal and other chronic conditions. Through its industry-leading network of dialysis centers, outpatient cardiac and vascular
labs, and urgent care centers, as well as the continent’s largest practice of hospitalist and post-acute providers, Fresenius
Medical Care North America provides coordinated health care services at pivotal care points for hundreds of thousands of
chronically ill customers. As the world’s largest fully vertically integrated renal company, it offers specialty pharmacy and
laboratory services, and manufactures and distributes the most comprehensive line of dialysis equipment, disposable products, and
renal pharmaceuticals. For more information, visit http://www.FMCNA.com.
Fresenius Medical Care North America
Jon Stone, 781-392-4680
Jonathan.d.stone@fmc-na.com
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