Hospice Discharge
The hospice benefit is available only to individuals who are terminally ill; therefore, a hospice may discharge a patient if it discovers that the patient is not terminally ill. Discharge may also be necessary when the patient moves out of the service area of the hospice. The hospice notifies the intermediary of the discharge so that hospice services and billings are terminated as of that date. In this situation, the patient loses the remaining days in the benefit period. However, there is no increase cost to the beneficiary. General coverage under Medicare is reinstated at the time the patient revokes the benefit or is discharged.
Once a hospice chooses to admit a Medicare beneficiary, it may not automatically or routinely discharge the beneficiary at its discretion, even if the care promises to be costly or inconvenient, or the State allows for discharge under State requirements. The election of the hospice benefit is the beneficiary’s choice rather than the hospice’s choice, and the hospice cannot revoke the beneficiary’s election. Neither should the hospice request nor demand that the patient revoke his/her election
In most situations, discharge from a hospice will occur as a result of one the following:
The beneficiary decides to revoke the hospice benefit;
The beneficiary moves away from the geographic area that the hospice defines in its policies as its service area;
The beneficiary transfers to another hospice;
The beneficiary’s condition improves and he/she is no longer considered terminally ill. In this situation, the hospice will be unable to recertify the patient; or
The beneficiary dies.
There may be extraordinary circumstances in which a hospice would be unable to continue to provide hospice care to a patient. These situations would include issues where patient safety or hospice staff safety is compromised. The hospice must make every effort to resolve these problems satisfactorily before it considers discharge an option. All efforts by the hospice to resolve the problem(s) must be documented in detail in the patient’s clinical record and the hospice must notify the fiscal intermediary and State Survey Agency of the circumstances surrounding the impending discharge. The hospice may also need to make referrals to other relevant state/community agencies (i.e., Adult Protective Services) as appropriate.
Medicare hospice benefit. How to identify and handling the denial. Usage of correct CPT code and Modifiers. Using correct form,ICD code
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Popular Posts
-
Does the Benefit cover continuous care (a special level of hospice care) at home? Yes. If there is a brief, acute episode that requires add...
-
What is not covered? The following services are not covered under the Medicare Hospice Benefit: • Services for conditions unrelated to the t...
-
What is hospice care? Considered to be the model for quality, compassionate care at the end-of-life, hospice care involves a team-oriented a...
-
Who is eligible for hospice benefits under Medicare? Hospice benefits are available to Medicare beneficiaries who: • Are certified by their ...
-
Levels of Hospice Care There are four levels of hospice care. All four levels are approved at the time of authorization of services. The ho...
-
Your doctor and the hospice medical team will work with you and your family to set up a plan of care that meets your needs. Your plan of car...
-
Each hospice designs and prints its election statement. The election statement must include the following items of information: * Identifica...
-
Section 512(b) of the MMA amends section 1814(i) of the Act and establishes payment for this service. The statute specifies that the Medicar...
-
Election by Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF) and Nursing Facilities (NFs) Residents and Dually Eligible Beneficiaries A Medicare beneficiary w...
-
Why would a patient stop receiving hospice care? A hospice patient has the right to stop receiving hospice care at any time, for any reason....
No comments:
Post a Comment