Stay up-to-date with the latest news from the campaign and progress on the legislation.
For media inquiries, please contact us.
National Coalition of Kidney and Transplant Organizations Successfully Advocate for the Protection of Kidney Transplant Recipients
Kidney transplant recipients require daily, lifelong immunosuppressive medications to reduce the likelihood of organ rejection. Under current law, Medicare covers the cost of a kidney transplant, but only pays for anti-rejection medication for three years.
Statement from Honor the Gift on the Savings Estimate Conducted by the Congressional Budget Office (H.R. 5535/S. 3353)
Kidney transplant recipients require daily, lifelong immunosuppressive medications to reduce the likelihood of organ rejection. Under current law, Medicare covers the cost of a kidney transplant, but only pays for anti-rejection medication for three years.
The Honor the Gift Coalition Celebrates the Senate’s Bipartisan Introduction of the Immuno Bill
Kidney transplant recipients require daily, lifelong immunosuppressive medications to reduce the likelihood of organ rejection. Under current law, Medicare covers the cost of a kidney transplant, but only pays for anti-rejection medication for three years.
National Coalition of Kidney and Transplant Organizations Celebrate Congress’ Bipartisan Effort to Honor the Gift of Kidney Donation
Kidney transplant recipients require daily, lifelong immunosuppressive medications to reduce the likelihood of organ rejection. Under current law, Medicare covers the cost of a kidney transplant, but only pays for anti-rejection medication for three years.
HHS Reports Cost-Savings for Extending Anti-Rejection Medication Coverage
Kidney transplant recipients require daily, lifelong immunosuppressive medications to reduce the likelihood of organ rejection. Under current law, Medicare covers the cost of a kidney transplant, but only pays for anti-rejection medication for three years.
It’s time to #HonorTheGift of kidney donation
Kidney transplant recipients require daily, lifelong immunosuppressive medications to reduce the likelihood of organ rejection. Under current law, Medicare covers the cost of a kidney transplant, but only pays for anti-rejection medication for three years.