WASHINGTON – When Justin Charles Evans began suffering from kidney failure, he said his career as an actor and stunt double came to a halt. He and others rallied outside the U.S. Capitol Thursday morning to advocate for the improved care of dialysis patients.
Evans wants to spread awareness about how many Black dialysis patients receive poor care.
“I saw other people are going through worse things than me. D.C. is a district, it’s not even a state, so they treat those people horribly,” he said. “That made me say if I have to die for this, then I will. I will step up and I will say something because I can’t just sit silently while my family – my people – die.”
According to a video by Healthy DC & Me Leadership Coalition, the per capita costs of dialysis in the United States are the highest in the industrialized world, but the U.S. still has one of the highest prevalences of kidney failure, disproportionately affecting minority and low-income individuals.
Rhonda Hamilton, the president of the Healthy DC & Me Leadership Coalition, called the two largest dialysis providers, DeVita and Fresenius, “big dialysis” and a “duopoly.” The coalition’s video said the companies “put profits before proper patient healthcare.”
“We must dismantle ‘big dialysis,’” Hamilton said in front of Thursday’s crowd.