Purpose of review: Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a widespread health issue, affecting one out of every 10 adults. This prevalence is even higher among vulnerable and underserved populations, including low-income individuals, racial and ethnic minorities, and immigrants. Urban areas such as New York City and Los Angeles County offer municipal safety-net healthcare systems for these groups.
Recent findings: Safety-net providers are essential to the healthcare landscape for vulnerable populations with chronic diseases including the Los Angeles County Health Services that exemplifies how effective population health strategies can be utilized to manage CKD and at-risk persons. These approaches focus on risk assessment, integrated practices, patient and care-partner education, cost reduction, and strategic partnerships. Kidney care tailored "Expected Practices" ensure that management strategies are equitable and based on clinical evidence. The eConsult system allows CKD patients' primary care providers to efficiently consult nephrologists, facilitating timely specialty care appointments through "Precision Scheduling." Priority goals include slowing CKD progression, equitable access to home dialysis, and preemptive kidney transplantation. As highlighted by Kalantar-Zadeh et al. in 2025 CJASN, advancing equitable kidney care through population health approaches support comprehensive and efficient CKD management, including diabetic kidney disease, in Los Angeles County's safety-net system.
Summary: With a large, underserved patient population affected by CKD, urban safety-net healthcare systems like those in Los Angeles County emphasize early detection, multidisciplinary management, shared decision-making, and equitable access to CKD. They prioritize equitable access to home dialysis modality choice and kidney transplantation, aiming to improve outcomes and the quality-of-life for diverse patient groups.
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