Nephrology

New Leadership on Dialysis Unit

Kaci Caradine and Dr. Daniel Feig took on new leadership roles on the Children’s of Alabama Pediatric Dialysis Unit in the fall of 2023.

As more children requiring kidney dialysis survive and thrive—able to leave the hospital and return for treatment on an outpatient basis—the Pediatric Dialysis Unit at Children’s of Alabama has needed to adapt and grow. New leadership is poised to tackle this shift with aplomb, planning to increase staffing, expand education for team members and boost current programs for patients and families.

As of fall 2023, the unit is headed by medical director Daniel Feig, M.D., Ph.D., MPH, medical director of pediatric nephrology at Children’s, along with nursing director Kaci Caradine, BSN, RN, CNML. The pair replace the outstanding former medical director Sahar Fathallah, M.D., who is pursuing other professional opportunities at Children’s, and former nursing director Suzanne White, RN, who retired.

Within the last several years, the dialysis unit’s patient load doubled. It now includes about 20 patients who undergo outpatient hemodialysis treatments three times weekly, along with another 15 who receive home-based, nightly peritoneal dialysis and visit the unit about once a month. Most commonly, pediatric dialysis patients are affected by congenital abnormalities of the kidneys or urinary tract that lead to irreversible kidney failure, Feig said. Others require dialysis due to problems such as sepsis, solid organ transplantation, autoimmune diseases and other chronic issues.

“As we continue to make great improvements in the care we deliver, more kids are able to leave the hospital and lead full lives,” said Caradine, previously the director of nursing for Children’s Cardiovascular ICU.

Feig agreed, noting that referrals to the Children’s dialysis unit have also increased, both from the Southeast and around the nation. “We’ve gotten better at treating kidney failure in the Neonatal ICU and the very youngest patients, so kids who didn’t use to survive are now growing up with kidney failure,” said Feig, who’s also a professor of pediatrics and director of the Division of Pediatric Nephrology at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB). “Now, the average age in the dialysis population is dropping from young teenager to about 5 to 7 years old.”

To keep pace, Feig and Caradine intend to quickly add to the dialysis team, which currently consists of 17 nurses, three nurse practitioners, nine attending physicians, and other roles that include a social worker, a dietitian and a counselor.

But many new clinicians to the unit don’t have experience in dialysis, making it crucial to “develop education and career development programs that get new staff up to speed,” Feig said. “We’re pulling together a didactic program involving the physicians and nurse practitioners who care for these patients, so they have a greater understanding of kidney disease and the challenges these kids face.”

“We want to develop a comprehensive educational program and onboarding curriculum for our new nurses,” Caradine agreed, “as well as ensure our current nurses are able to grow their knowledge base to continue to provide state-of-the-art care for our patients.”

Additional priorities include enhancing the Food as Medicine program, which provides packages of ingredients to patients’ families to assist them in preparing dialysis-safe meals. “This program is associated with huge improvements in patients’ quality of life and lab testing, and they’re much more able to stick to a prescription diet,” Feig said. “Expanding the program to a larger portion of the unit is a goal that will allow us to help all of our families.”

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