For nursing home residents with End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD), effective medication management is about more than just ensuring pills are passed on time, it’s about timing them right. Dialysis profoundly alters how medications behave in the body, and failure to coordinate medications with dialysis schedules can lead to dangerous side effects or reduced treatment effectiveness.
This guide will help your nursing home team understand why timing matters, which medications are affected, and how to work collaboratively with dialysis providers to ensure resident safety and wellbeing.
Dialysis removes waste products and excess fluids, but it can also remove certain medications. Depending on a drug’s molecular size, protein binding, and volume of distribution, some are filtered out during treatment while others are unaffected.
Dialysis can also:
Because of this, medication timing and dosage must be carefully adjusted based on the dialysis schedule and resident-specific factors.
Maintain a separate list or flag in your EMR for medications that need adjusted timing on dialysis days. This makes it easier for med passers to avoid errors.
Collaborate with Pharmacists and Dialysis TeamsHold regular medication review meetings that include your consultant pharmacist, nursing leadership, and (if possible) a representative from the dialysis facility. These reviews should focus on:
Conduct in-services to educate nursing staff and med techs about which medications require timing modifications and the reasons behind them. This helps promote critical thinking and proactive communication.
Use Communication Logs EffectivelyMaintain a communication notebook, shared folder, or secure digital form for dialysis staff to leave notes about:
If a medication is held due to dialysis timing, document it properly using your facility’s preferred method (e.g., “held per MD order due to dialysis”). This protects both staff and residents from confusion and ensures compliance with regulations.
Residents and their families may not always understand why medications are delayed or changed around dialysis. Educate them by:
Qsource’s ESRD Network offers helpful resources for improving medication safety and care coordination across dialysis settings. Visit esrd.qsource.org to access the materials and explore training opportunities for your staff.