Why Are Black Seniors in Prince George's County, MD Disproportionately Affected by Kidney Disease?
Let me be direct with you, the way I'd be direct with anyone sitting in my pew on a Sunday morning: kidney disease is not an equal-opportunity illness. The data is unambiguous, and the history behind the data is not comfortable — but it is essential.
According to the United States Renal Data System (USRDS) 2024 Annual Data Report (usrds-adr.niddk.nih.gov), Black Americans develop End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) — the medical term for kidney failure requiring dialysis or a transplant — at a rate of 3.4 times higher than white Americans. That is not a rounding error. That is a crisis hiding in plain sight.
Prince George's County, Maryland is one of the most economically vibrant majority-Black counties in the United States — median household income above $80,000, home to university students, federal workers, business owners. And yet the same chronic disease burden that devastates lower-income Black communities follows our people across income lines, because the root causes run deeper than income.
USRDS 2024
U.S. Census Bureau ACS 2023
CMS.gov 2026
JASN 2023
The three primary drivers of kidney disease in Black seniors are:
- Hypertension (high blood pressure): The number one cause of ESRD in Black Americans. Prince George's County CDC PLACES 2023 data shows 42.0% of adults in the county have been diagnosed with high blood pressure — a staggering share. Decades of uncontrolled or under-treated hypertension silently scar kidney tissue. (Source: CDC PLACES 2023, Prince George's County, MD)
- Diabetes: The second leading cause of ESRD. CDC PLACES 2023 data for Prince George's County shows 12.3% of adults have diagnosed diabetes — and Black adults nationally are 60% more likely to be diagnosed with diabetes than white adults. (Source: CDC PLACES 2023; CDC National Diabetes Statistics Report 2024)
- The APOL1 gene: Up to 13% of Black Americans carry two high-risk variants of the APOL1 gene — a genetic inheritance traced to West African ancestry — which dramatically increases the risk of certain forms of kidney disease including FSGS and hypertension-attributed kidney failure, independent of blood pressure or blood sugar levels. This is not something you can diet or exercise your way out of. (Source: Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, 2023)
How Does Medicare Cover Dialysis — and What Does It Actually Cost Seniors on Fixed Disability Income?
This is where I need you to sit down and read carefully, because the gap between what Medicare says it covers and what a senior on disability income actually pays can mean the difference between staying in your home and losing everything.
Here is what Original Medicare (Parts A and B) covers for kidney disease and dialysis, per CMS.gov Medicare Coverage of Kidney Dialysis & Transplant Services (2026):
- Outpatient dialysis (hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis): Medicare Part B covers 80% of the approved amount after the annual Part B deductible of $240 in 2026. You pay the remaining 20%.
- Home dialysis training and equipment: Also covered at 80/20 under Part B.
- Dialysis-related medications: Covered under Part B if administered during dialysis — but oral equivalents may require Part D, adding complexity.
- Kidney transplant: Covered under Medicare Part A (hospital) and Part B (physician services), including immunosuppressant drugs post-transplant for as long as Medicare covers them.
Now let's talk real dollars. The average cost of one outpatient hemodialysis session in the United States runs approximately $250–$350 per session at Medicare's approved rate. Standard dialysis is three sessions per week — that is 156 sessions per year. At Medicare's approved rate of roughly $260/session, the total approved amount is approximately $40,560 per year. After Medicare pays 80%, the patient owes 20% — which is $8,112 per year in cost-sharing alone.
For a senior on disability Medicare in Prince George's County receiving $1,402/month in average SSDI benefits (the 2026 national average per the Social Security Administration), that $8,112 annual copay represents 48% of half their annual income. That is not a copay. That is a financial catastrophe.
Annual Dialysis Cost-Sharing: What Prince George's County Seniors Actually Pay Under Different Coverage Scenarios (2026)
*Medigap Plan G covers 20% coinsurance after Part B deductible; premiums not included in this comparison. **D-SNP cost-sharing varies by plan; dual-eligible beneficiaries with full Medicaid typically pay $0. Estimates based on CMS 2026 Medicare dialysis reimbursement rates and national average session costs. Source: CMS.gov 2026; SSA.gov 2026 SSDI average benefit data.
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What Is a D-SNP and How Does It Help Black Seniors with Kidney Disease on Fixed Income in Prince George's County?
If you or someone you love is already on both Medicare and Medicaid — what the government calls "dual-eligible" — a Dual Eligible Special Needs Plan (D-SNP) may be the single most important plan type you've never heard of.
D-SNPs are Medicare Advantage plans specifically built for people who qualify for both programs. For seniors with kidney disease, the financial difference is life-changing:
- Full-benefit dual-eligible beneficiaries typically pay $0 in dialysis cost-sharing — Medicaid covers what Medicare doesn't.
- D-SNPs often include care coordination — a nurse case manager who helps schedule dialysis appointments, manage medications, and coordinate between kidney specialists and primary care.
- Many D-SNPs include transportation benefits to dialysis centers — critical because dialysis three times per week is physically exhausting and driving is often not possible.
- Some D-SNPs include over-the-counter allowances for supplies, and food/grocery benefits that can help diabetic seniors maintain proper nutrition to slow kidney disease progression.
Prince George's County had multiple D-SNP plans available in the 2026 plan year through the Maryland Medicare Advantage marketplace. To see the complete, current list of ALL plans available in your specific ZIP code in Prince George's County — including every D-SNP, HMO, PPO, and PFFS plan — you must visit Medicare.gov/plan-compare and enter your ZIP code. CMS updates this database in real time.
Why does enrollment remain low? Because nobody told us. The same systemic barriers that kept our grandparents from voting — complexity, bureaucracy, and the quiet assumption that we wouldn't figure it out — are at work in Medicare enrollment. Add in justified distrust of a healthcare system that has historically used Black bodies for research without consent, and you have seniors sitting in dialysis chairs three times a week, paying $8,000 a year they don't owe, because no one sat down with them and explained their rights.
That is what I'm here to do.
What Did the 21st Century Cures Act Change for Seniors with ESRD on Medicare Advantage in Prince George's County?
This is a policy change that didn't get enough attention in Black communities, and it matters enormously for anyone with kidney failure in Prince George's County.
Before January 1, 2021, people with End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) — that is, kidney failure requiring dialysis or a transplant — were barred from enrolling in Medicare Advantage plans. They were locked into Original Medicare only. For those with low incomes, this often meant higher out-of-pocket costs and less coordinated care.
The 21st Century Cures Act changed that. As of January 1, 2021, individuals with ESRD can now enroll in Medicare Advantage plans, including D-SNPs. This means:
- If you developed kidney failure and went on dialysis before 2021, you may never have been told you now have new plan options.
- If you are newly diagnosed with ESRD in 2026, you have a Special Enrollment Period to join a Medicare Advantage plan within a specific window.
- If you are currently in Original Medicare and on dialysis, you can evaluate whether a Medicare Advantage plan (especially a D-SNP if you qualify) might reduce your costs — but you MUST verify that your dialysis center is in-network before you switch. This is non-negotiable. Missing this check can cost you thousands.
What Does the Chronic Disease Burden in Prince George's County Tell Us About Who Is Most at Risk?
Let's look at the numbers on the ground in Prince George's County. This data comes from CDC PLACES 2023 (places.cdc.gov), which gives us adult health estimates at the county level.
- Hypertension (High Blood Pressure): 42.0% of Prince George's County adults — the number one driver of kidney disease in Black Americans.
- Diagnosed Diabetes: 12.3% of adults — the number two driver of kidney failure.
- Obesity: 36.8% of adults — a significant risk factor for both diabetes and hypertension, accelerating kidney disease progression.
- Any Disability: 28.1% of adults — reflecting the high burden of chronic conditions that can qualify people for Medicare before age 65 through SSDI.
- Annual Checkup Rate: Only 76.4% of adults visit a doctor for a routine checkup annually — meaning nearly 1 in 4 adults in the county is NOT getting regular bloodwork that would catch early kidney function decline.
Prince George's County, MD: Chronic Disease Rates Among Adults — Key Kidney Disease Risk Factors (CDC PLACES 2023)
Source: CDC PLACES 2023, Prince George's County, MD (places.cdc.gov). "No Annual Checkup" = 100% minus 76.4% who reported an annual checkup. All figures represent adults (18+).
These numbers represent real people. Real families. The 42 out of every 100 adults with high blood pressure — many of them uncontrolled — are the same people who will be sitting in dialysis chairs in 10 or 20 years if we don't intervene now. And when they get there, they need to know their Medicare rights cold.
Are There Dialysis Centers and Kidney Care Providers in Prince George's County That Accept Medicare?
Prince George's County has dialysis centers — including facilities operated by the two largest dialysis chains in the country, DaVita and Fresenius Kidney Care (Fresenius Medical Care), both of which are Medicare-certified. You can search Medicare-certified dialysis facilities at Medicare.gov/Care Compare by entering your ZIP code and selecting "Dialysis Facilities."
Why does this matter? Because if you are enrolled in a Medicare Advantage HMO — rather than Original Medicare — your dialysis center must be in-network or you face out-of-network costs. This is the check you MUST run before switching plans. Call your dialysis center directly and ask: "Do you accept [Plan Name] as in-network?" Get the answer in writing if you can.
For kidney transplant candidates: Prince George's County is served by transplant programs at major academic medical centers in the greater Washington, D.C. metropolitan area, including MedStar Georgetown University Hospital and University of Maryland Medical Center. Both accept Medicare. However, transplant center network status varies by Medicare Advantage plan, so again — verify before you enroll.
Under Medicare, the Medicare ESRD Network program provides patient services and advocacy for dialysis patients in your region. Maryland falls under ESRD Network 5, operated by IPRO. Their patient services line can help you understand your rights if you have