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Medicare Part A Coverage Guidelines

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Title: Medicare Part A Coverage Guidelines


1
Medicare Part A Coverage Guidelines
2
Q2Administrators Contact Information
  • This presentation was created by the
    Q2Administrators training team. If you have any
    questions about the material or Q2A training,
    contact us at
  • QIC.Training_at_Q2A.org

3
Course Objectives
  • Step 2 (a) of the QICs Adjudication Protocol
    states For each argument that does not involve
    denial as not reasonable and necessary, (the QIC
    must) identify the services at issue and review
    the relevant records and Medicare coverage,
    payment guidelines or Review Criteria.
  • The purpose of this course is to provide
    guidelines and reference materials for carrying
    out the step.

4
Course Objectives (Continued)
  • After taking this course, you should understand
  • Who is eligible for Part A benefits
  • The cost of Part A coverage
  • The basics of calculating benefits
  • Basic Part A terminology
  • Part A coverage guidelines
  • Payment guidelines
  • Review Criteria
  • How to look up rules and regulations that govern
    Part A

5
Agenda
  • Resources
  • Medicare Part A Overview
  • Inpatient Care
  • Eligibility
  • Covered Services
  • Reimbursement
  • Benefit Periods
  • Psychiatric Services
  • Skilled Nursing Facility Care
  • Eligibility
  • Covered Services
  • Reimbursement
  • Benefit Periods
  • Review Criteria
  • Home Health Care
  • Eligibility
  • Covered Services
  • Reimbursement
  • Benefit Periods
  • Review Criteria
  • Hospice Care
  • Eligibility
  • Covered Services
  • Reimbursement
  • Benefit Periods
  • Review Criteria

6
Agenda (Continued)
  • Outpatient Hospital Care
  • Eligibility
  • Covered Services
  • Reimbursement
  • Community mental health centers
  • Other rehabilitation facilities
  • Comprehensive outpatient rehabilitation
    facilities
  • Rural health clinics
  • Federally qualified health clinics
  • Renal dialysis facilities
  • Review Criteria
  • Additional Part A Services
  • Dental
  • Ancillary
  • Out of Country
  • Participating and Non-participating Providers
  • Discussion/Review

7
Resources
8
Resources
  • Much of the material in this presentation is from
    the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) and CMS
    Internet-Only Manuals (IOMs).
  • Do not use this presentation as a manual. See
    Title 42 of the CFR and the IOMs for more
    in-depth information regarding Medicare Part A
    coverage.

9
Federal Register, CFR
  • The Federal Register and the CFR contain
    regulations that govern the Medicare program. To
    access
  • Go to the CMS Web site http//www.cms.hhs.gov.
  • On the left-side menu under the Topics heading,
    click the Regulations link.
  • On the CMS and Related Laws and Regulations
    page, scroll down until the Federal Register
    and The Code of Federal Regulations via GPO
    Access links appear on the right side of the
    page.
  • The links will take you to the Federal Register
    or the CFR on the Government Printing Office
    (GPO) Web site.

10
IOMs
  • To access the IOMs
  • Go to the CMS Web site http//www.cms.hhs.gov.
  • On the left-side menu under the Topics heading,
    click on the Manuals link.
  • Scroll down to the Internet-Only Manuals (IOMs)
    link.
  • Click this link to view a table of contents of
    manual topics.

11
Medicare and You Handbook
  • The Medicare and You 2005 Handbook is the
    Medicare manual that CMS distributes to
    beneficiaries.
  • Go to the Medicare Web site http//www.medicare.g
    ov.
  • On the left menu, scroll down to and click on the
    Search Tools link.
  • Click the Find a Medicare Publication link on
    the right side of the page. This will take you to
    the Medicare Publications page.
  • Select Medicare and You 2005 to view the PDF
    file.

12
Helpful Web Sites
  • http//www.firstgov.gov (U.S. Governments
    official Web portal)
  • http//www.medicare.gov
  • http//www.cms.hhs.gov
  • http//medicareadvocacy.org (Center for Medicare
    Advocacys Web site)

13
Additional Resources
  • Social Securitys Retirement and Medicare Web
    Page
  • http//www.socialsecurity.gov/rm2.htm
  • CMS Glossary
  • http//www.cms.hhs.gov/glossary/
  • CMS Acronyms Glossary
  • http//www.cms.hhs.gov/acronyms/

14
Medicare Part A Overview
15
Medicare Part A
  • Medicare Part A is also known as Hospital
    Insurance. It is generally provided for
  • People age 65 or older
  • Most people who are disabled for 24 months or
    more who are entitled to Social Security or
    Railroad Retirement benefits
  • People with End Stage Renal Disease (ESRD)

16
Basic Coverage
  • Inpatient hospital care
  • Skilled nursing facility (SNF) care following a
    hospital stay
  • Home health care
  • Hospice care

17
Providers
  • A provider is an individual or agency that
    performs health care services.
  • A provider must be a participating provider in
    order to render Medicare-covered services and be
    reimbursed by Medicare. Participating providers
    sign a provider agreement with CMS.

18
Part A Providers
  • Hospitals
  • Skilled nursing facilities (SNF)
  • Home health agencies (HHA)
  • Hospice agencies

  • Other rehabilitation facilities
  • Comprehensive outpatient rehabilitation
    facilities (CORF)
  • Renal dialysis facilities
  • Rural health clinics
  • Community mental health centers (CMHCs)

19
The Cost of Part A Coverage
  • Most beneficiaries do not have to pay a monthly
    premium for Medicare Part A because they (or a
    spouse) paid Medicare taxes while they were
    working.
  • Most who qualify are automatically enrolled by
    the Social Security Administration (SSA).

20
Part A Cost (Continued)
  • A beneficiary may not qualify for premium-free
    Medicare Part A coverage if he or his spouse
  • Did not pay Medicare taxes while working
  • Did not work long enough (10 years in most cases)
    in Medicare-covered employment

21
Part A Cost (Continued)
  • If a beneficiary does not qualify for
    premium-free Medicare Part A coverage, he may
    still be able to get the coverage by paying a
    monthly premium. The amount of the premium
    depends on the length of time the beneficiary
    worked in Medicare-covered employment.
  • If he worked for less than seven years in
    Medicare-covered employment, he will pay a higher
    premium than if he worked between seven and 10
    years in Medicare-covered employment.

22
Inpatient Care
23
Eligibility
  • Medicare helps pay for inpatient care if the
    following conditions are met
  • The beneficiary is entitled to Medicare Part A
  • The hospital stay is medically necessary
  • The inpatient services provided cannot be
    provided as outpatient services
  • The services are not excluded from coverage

24
Covered Services
  • Semi-private room
  • Meals, including special diets
  • Care for kidney donors
  • General nursing services
  • Drugs and biologicals (vaccines, sera,
    intravenous solutions, dyes for x-rays, etc.)

25
Covered Services (Continued)
  • Supplies and equipment
  • Blood (after 3-pint blood deductible is met)
  • Health care associated with pregnancy
  • Certain diagnostic services
  • Services of residents and interns
  • Rehabilitation services (physical, speech,
    occupational and respiratory therapy)

26
Non-covered Services
  • Private room (only covered if medically necessary
    and ordered by a physician)
  • Private-duty nursing
  • Custodial care
  • Personal convenience items like televisions or
    telephones

27
Non-Covered Services (Continued)
  • Cosmetic surgery
  • Foot care
  • Dental care
  • There may be exceptions to these exclusions,
    depending on a beneficiarys medical condition
    and the medical necessity of the services.

28
Reimbursement
  • Medicare pays for most inpatient hospital care
    under the Prospective Payment System (PPS).
  • Under PPS, hospitals are paid a predetermined
    rate based on the diagnosis, surgical procedure
    (if applicable), patients age and discharge
    status. These rates are based on payment
    categories called Diagnosis Related Groups (DRGs).

29
Benefit Periods
  • A benefit period is the method of measuring the
    days a beneficiary uses Part A.
  • A benefit period covers 90 days, and begins when
    the beneficiary is admitted as an inpatient to a
    hospital. It ends when a beneficiary has been out
    of a hospital or SNF for 60 consecutive days.

30
Benefit Periods (Continued)
  • If the beneficiary is readmitted to a hospital
    after one benefit period has ended, a new benefit
    period begins. The beneficiary must pay the
    inpatient hospital deductible (912 in 2005) for
    each benefit period.
  • There is no limit to the number of benefit
    periods a beneficiary can use.

31
Benefit Periods (Continued)
  • Lifetime reserve days (LTRs) are 60 additional
    days a patient can use after the 90 regular days
    of inpatient services are used up. The patient is
    not required to use LTRs.
  • LTRs are not renewable. Once any or all of the
    days are used, they are never available again,
    even with the beginning of a new benefit period.

32
Benefit Periods (Continued)
  • Calculating the number of days used in a benefit
    period helps determine
  • When benefit periods start and end
  • How many coinsurance and lifetime reserve days
    are left for the beneficiary
  • The amount the beneficiary will pay to cover the
    deductible and coinsurance

33
Benefit Periods (Continued)
  • Beneficiaries are responsible for a deductible
    and possibly coinsurance for each benefit period.
  • The deductible is the amount the beneficiary must
    pay before Medicare begins to pay. The inpatient
    deductible changes at the beginning of each
    calendar year.
  • The coinsurance is the amount the beneficiary is
    responsible for paying after the deductible is
    met.

34
Benefit Periods (Continued)
  • Inpatient coverage for each benefit period is as
    follows
  • First 60 days Part A pays for all covered
    services after the beneficiary pays the
    deductible.
  • Days 61-90 Part A pays for all covered services
    except the daily coinsurance amount, which is 25
    percent of the current years inpatient
    deductible.
  • Days 91-150 The beneficiary can elect to use his
    60 lifetime reserve days. Part A pays all covered
    services except the daily lifetime reserve
    amount, which is 50 percent of the current years
    inpatient deductible.

35
Benefit Periods (Continued)
  • When calculating the days used in a benefit
    period
  • The date of admission is counted as the first
    inpatient day.
  • The date of discharge is not counted as an
    inpatient day.
  • If admission and either discharge or death occur
    on the same day, the day is considered a date of
    admission and counted as one inpatient day.

36
Inpatient Psychiatric Services
  • Medicare imposes a 190-day lifetime limit on
    services rendered in a freestanding psychiatric
    hospital.
  • The 190 lifetime psychiatric days are not
    renewable, even with the beginning of a new
    benefit period.
  • The rules regarding regular inpatient benefit
    periods, deductibles, coinsurance and lifetime
    reserve days also apply to inpatient psychiatric
    care.

37
Inpatient Psychiatric Services (Continued)
  • Covered services in a psychiatric hospital
    include
  • Active treatment (doctor-approved treatment that
    can reasonably be expected to improve the
    beneficiarys condition)
  • Non-psychiatric care (When certain conditions are
    met, Medicare covers medical or surgical care a
    beneficiary receives while in a psychiatric
    hospital that is not active psychiatric
    treatment.)

38
Skilled Nursing Facility Care
39
Overview
  • A skilled nursing facility (SNF) is a qualified
    facility that has the staff and equipment to
    provide skilled nursing care or skilled
    rehabilitation.
  • A rural hospital with fewer than 50 beds is known
    as a swing-bed facility because it can swing
    its beds between a SNF and hospital level of care
    based on its needs.

40
Overview (Continued)
  • Skilled nursing care is care that can only be
    performed by, or under the supervision of,
    qualified nursing personnel.
  • Skilled rehabilitation services include physical,
    speech or occupational therapy performed by, or
    under the supervision of, a qualified therapist.

41
Eligibility
  • Medicare can help pay for a beneficiarys SNF
    care if five conditions are met
  • The beneficiary requires skilled nursing or rehab
    services on a daily basis
  • The beneficiary must receive the care on an
    inpatient basis
  • The services are ordered by a physician

42
Eligibility (Continued)
  • The beneficiary must have had a hospital
    inpatient stay for at least three days in a row
    before transferring to a SNF. The day of
    discharge does not count. The beneficiary must go
    to the SNF within 30 days of the hospital
    discharge.
  • The beneficiary must require skilled services
    related to the condition for which he was
    hospitalized

43
Eligibility (Continued)
  • A physician must certify that the beneficiary
    meets all five conditions at the time of
    admission or soon thereafter.
  • Recertification is required no later than the
    14th day after SNF care begins. Subsequent
    recertification is required every 30 days.

44
Covered Services
  • Semi-private room
  • All meals, including special diets
  • Regular nursing services
  • Physical, occupational and speech therapy
  • Drugs furnished by the facility
  • Blood (after 3-pint blood deductible is met)
  • Medical supplies, such as splints and casts
  • Use of equipment such as a wheelchair supplied by
    the SNF

45
Non-covered Services
  • Private room (only covered if medically necessary
    and ordered by a physician)
  • Private-duty nursing
  • Personal convenience items like televisions or
    telephones
  • Services after 100 days per benefit period
  • Custodial care

46
Reimbursement
  • Medicare pays for most inpatient SNF care under
    the Prospective Payment System (PPS).
  • Under PPS, SNFs are paid a predetermined rate
    based on the patients Minimum Data Set (MDS) and
    the Resident Assessment Instrument (RAI).

47
Benefit Periods
  • SNF coverage for each 100-day benefit period is
    as follows
  • First 20 days Part A pays for all covered
    services.
  • Days 21-100 Part A pays for all covered services
    except the daily coinsurance amount, which is
    equal to 1/8 of the current years inpatient
    deductible.
  • After 100 days in a benefit period Part A no
    longer covers SNF care, until the beneficiary
    starts a new benefit period.

48
SNF Review Criteria
  • Use the SNF Review Criteria chart when
    adjudicating skilled nursing facility appeals.
  • The chart includes references to specific
    sections of the CFR and the IOMs.

49
Home Health Care
50
Overview
  • A home health agency (HHA) is a facility that
    offers skilled care and other services to
    patients in their homes.
  • Medicare pays for home health services under Part
    A or Part B. Claims are processed under Part A.

51
Eligibility
  • Medicare Part A pays for care in a beneficiarys
    home if all of the following conditions are met
  • The beneficiary requires a skilled service
    (intermittent skilled nursing care, physical
    therapy, speech therapy or continuing
    occupational therapy)
  • The beneficiary is homebound
  • The beneficiary is under the care of a physician
    who has set up and reviews a home health plan of
    care

52
Eligibility (Continued)
  • The physician must review the plan of care with
    the home health agency staff at least every 60
    days. The plan must be reviewed more frequently
    under any of the following circumstances
  • The beneficiary chooses to transfer to another
    agency or is discharged and returns to the same
    agency
  • There is a significant change in the
    beneficiarys condition
  • The patient is discharged early

53
Covered Services
  • Skilled nursing care
  • Home health aide
  • Physical, speech and continual occupational
    therapy
  • Medical social workers
  • Medical supplies
  • Durable medical equipment (copayment required)
  • The therapy can be provided on an outpatient
    basis to non-homebound patients who are not under
    a home health plan of care. Physicians must
    recertify the need every 30 days.

54
Non-covered Services
  • Around-the-clock care at home
  • Most drugs
  • Meals delivered to a beneficiarys home
  • Custodial services

55
Reimbursement
  • Medicare pays for the full cost of services under
    the home health benefit using the Home Health
    Prospective Payment System (HHPPS).
  • HHPPS is based on a predetermined amount set by
    the Outcome and Assessment Information Set
    (OASIS).
  • OASIS generates a Health Insurance Prospective
    Payment System (HIPPS) code, which indicates the
    predetermined amount to be paid.
  • The beneficiary does not pay a deductible or
    coinsurance. A copayment is required for durable
    medical equipment.

56
Benefit Periods
  • Home health agency benefit periods (episodes) are
    60 days.
  • The benefit periods are unlimited.
  • The episode begins when the first billable visit
    is provided.
  • The episode ends on and includes the 60th day of
    care.

57
Benefit Periods (Continued)
  • The HHA will bill a request for anticipated
    payment (RAP) at the beginning of the 60-day
    episode and a final claim at the end of the
    episode.
  • For a beneficiarys initial episode, the HHA
    receives 60 percent of the predetermined amount
    when the RAP is billed. It receives the
    additional 40 percent when the final claim is
    billed.
  • For subsequent episodes, the HHA receives 50
    percent of the predetermined amount when the RAP
    is billed and the additional 50 percent when the
    final claim is billed.

58
Home Health Review Criteria
  • Use the Home Health Review Criteria chart when
    adjudicating home health appeals.
  • The chart includes references to specific
    sections of the CFR and the IOMs.

59
Hospice Care
60
Overview
  • A hospice is an agency or private organization
    that supports terminally ill patients who are
    expected to live six months or less. The goal of
    hospice agencies is to care for the patient and
    the patients family, not cure the patients
    illness.
  • Hospice agencies provide
  • Symptom management
  • Pain relief
  • Administration of medicine
  • Counseling
  • Respite care

61
Overview (Continued)
  • Hospice care can be provided in
  • The beneficiarys home
  • A hospice facility
  • A hospital
  • A skilled nursing facility

62
Eligibility
  • Part A pays for hospice care if the following
    conditions are met
  • The beneficiary has Medicare Part A coverage
  • The beneficiary elects hospice benefits, instead
    of standard Medicare coverage, for the terminal
    illness
  • A doctor certifies that the beneficiary is
    terminally ill, with a life expectancy of six
    months or less

63
Eligibility (Continued)
  • For an initial certification, if the hospice
    cannot obtain written certification within two
    calendar days, it must obtain oral certification
    within those two days. It must then obtain
    written certification no later than eight
    calendar days after the benefit period begins.
  • The hospice must obtain recertification no later
    than two calendar days after a new benefit period
    begins.

64
Eligibility (Continued)
  • The beneficiarys election statement must include
  • The name of the hospice
  • Effective date of the benefit
  • A general overview of the benefit
  • An explanation of palliative vs. curative
    treatment
  • Language stating that the patient is responsible
    for
  • Seeking pre-approval for treatment not included
    in the plan of care
  • Bills incurred for treatment from a provider not
    contracted with the hospice

65
Covered Services
  • Physician services
  • Nursing care
  • Medical supplies and equipment
  • Home health aide and homemaker services
  • Social workers
  • Counseling for beneficiary and family
  • Drugs for symptom control and pain relief
  • Physical and occupational therapy
  • Speech therapy
  • Dietary counseling
  • Short-term hospital care

66
Non-covered Services
  • Treatment to cure the beneficiarys illness
  • Limited costs for outpatient drugs and inpatient
    respite care
  • Room and board (for place of residency)
  • Care from another hospice that was not set up by
    the beneficiarys original hospice agency

67
Reimbursement
  • Hospice care is covered at 100 percent, with the
    exception of limited costs for outpatient drugs
    and inpatient respite care.
  • The beneficiary is responsible for
  • Five percent of the cost of prescription drugs or
    5 per prescription (whichever is less)
  • Five percent of the cost of inpatient respite care

68
Reimbursement (Continued)
  • Hospice agencies are reimbursed based on the
    level of care provided. The four levels are
  • Routine
  • Continuous
  • Inpatient respite
  • General inpatient care
  • A hospice bills separately for an employee
    attending physicians professional services. An
    attending physician not employed by the hospice
    bills his professional services through Medicare
    Part B.

69
Benefit Periods
  • The first two benefit periods are 90 days.
  • Subsequent benefit periods are 60 days.
  • There is no limit on a beneficiarys benefit
    periods.
  • A physician must recertify that the patient is
    terminally ill for each benefit period.

70
Hospice Review Criteria
  • Use the Hospice Review Criteria chart when
    adjudicating hospice appeals.
  • The chart includes references to specific
    sections of the CFR and the IOMs.

71
Benefit Periods Summary
72
Part A Benefit Periods
73
Outpatient Hospital Care
74
Overview
  • An outpatient is a person who has not been
    admitted as an inpatient, but receives services
    from a hospital or other provider.
  • Medicare offers outpatient coverage to
    beneficiaries who are receiving general nursing
    care services, but not staying at a hospital.

75
Overview (Continued)
  • Medicare Part A and Part B work together to cover
    outpatient services.
  • Part B benefits pay for outpatient services.
  • Part A intermediaries process outpatient claims.
  • Since Part B benefits pay for outpatient
    services, beneficiaries are not responsible for
    the Part A deductible. They are, however, still
    responsible for the yearly Part B deductible
    (110 in 2005).

76
Overview (Continued)
  • A beneficiary can spend the night in a hospital
    and still be designated an outpatient.
  • An example of this situation is when a doctor
    keeps a beneficiary in a hospital overnight for
    observation services.

77
Overview (Continued)
  • There are two types of outpatient services
  • Diagnostic
  • Therapeutic

78
Eligibility
  • Part B pays for outpatient services if all of the
    following conditions are met
  • The beneficiary has Part B coverage
  • The beneficiary has met the Part B deductible
  • The beneficiary pays coinsurance or a fixed
    copayment for each service
  • A physician, nurse practitioner, clinical nurse
    specialist, or physician assistant certifies the
    outpatient care

79
Eligibility (Continued)
  • Certification must be obtained at the time the
    plan of treatment is established, or as soon
    thereafter as possible.
  • Recertification statements are required at least
    every 30 days.

80
Covered Services
  • Physical, occupational and speech therapy
  • Clinical laboratory services billed by hospital
  • Preventive services
  • Mental health care (if physician certifies that
    inpatient care would be required without it)
  • Ambulance transportation (when other
    transportation endangers the beneficiarys health
    and the ambulance is hospital-based)

81
Covered Services (Continued)
  • Services in an emergency room or outpatient
    clinic
  • Drugs and biologicals not considered
    self-administered drugs
  • Physician services
  • Observation
  • Many other health services and supplies

82
Non-covered Services
  • Routine services
  • Personal comfort items
  • Custodial care
  • Cosmetic surgery
  • Dental services

83
Reimbursement
  • Outpatient hospital services are reimbursed under
    the Hospital Outpatient Prospective Payment
    System (OPPS).
  • OPPS was developed so that Medicare would pay a
    predetermined rate for each type of hospital
    service.

84
Community Mental Health Centers (CMHC)
  • CMHCs provide partial hospitalization (less than
    24 hours per day) services that include
  • Specialized services for children, the elderly,
    individuals who are chronically mentally ill, and
    those who have been discharged from inpatient
    treatment at a mental health facility
  • Emergency care
  • Psychosocial rehabilitation
  • Screening for patients being considered for
    admission to state mental health facilities

85
Other Rehabilitation Facilities
  • Medicare also covers services provided at
    freestanding entities that provide either
  • Physical therapy
  • Speech therapy
  • Occupational therapy

86
Comprehensive Outpatient Rehabilitation
Facilities (CORF)
  • A CORF must provide at least the following three
    services
  • Physicians services
  • Physical therapy
  • Social or psychological services

87
Rural Health Clinics (RHCs)
  • Provide the types of services patients could
    receive in a doctors office, outpatient clinic
    or emergency room
  • Must be located in a medically under-served area
    that is not urbanized as defined by the U.S.
    Bureau of Census
  • Services may be provided by a physician, nurse
    practitioner, physician assistant, nurse midwife,
    clinical psychologist or clinical social worker

88
Federally Qualified Health Clinics (FQHCs)
  • FQHCs provide the same services as RHCs.
  • A beneficiary is not responsible for a deductible
    when claims are processed for FQHCs. The
    beneficiary is still responsible for Part B
    coinsurance (20 percent of the billed charges).

89
Renal Dialysis Facilities
  • For beneficiaries with permanent kidney failure,
    Medicare covers dialysis treatments administered
    in an approved dialysis facility. Coverage
    includes
  • Equipment
  • Supplies
  • ESRD-related laboratory tests
  • Other services associated with treatment

90
B of A Review Criteria
  • Use the B of A Review Criteria chart when
    adjudicating outpatient hospital appeals. B of A
    is a common term for services processed by Part A
    intermediaries and paid for by Part B.
  • The chart includes references to specific
    sections of the CFR and the IOMs.

91
Additional Part A Services
92
Dental
  • When a patient is hospitalized for a dental
    procedure and the dentists services are covered
    under Part B, the inpatient hospital services are
    covered under Part A.
  • Although hospitalization for most dental
    services is excluded, hospitalization is covered
    when it is medically necessary to
  • Treat fractures of facial bones
  • Treat injuries to structures in the mouth that
    require surgery
  • Remove tumors or cysts from inside the mouth

93
Dental (Continued)
  • If a patient is hospitalized for a non-covered
    dental procedure but hospitalization is required
    to assure proper medical management, control, or
    treatment of a covered service (non-dental
    impairment), the hospitalization services are
    covered.

94
Ancillary
  • Ancillary services are services other than room
    and board furnished by the provider. When no Part
    A inpatient payment is made, the provider can
    bill certain services to Part B. Reasons for no
    Part A payment include
  • The beneficiarys Part A benefits are exhausted
  • Admission was not reasonable and necessary
  • A day (or days) of an otherwise covered stay was
    not reasonable and necessary
  • The beneficiary is not eligible for Part A
    benefits

95
Ancillary (Continued)
  • Billable services include
  • Diagnostic x-rays or tests
  • Surgical dressings, casts and splints
  • Prosthetic devices (other than dental)
  • Leg, arm, back and neck braces
  • Outpatient physical, speech and occupational
    therapy
  • Ambulance transportation to and from a hospital
  • Other services

96
Out of Country
  • In general, Medicare will not pay for health care
    obtained outside the United States.
  • Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam,
    American Samoa and the Northern Mariana Islands
    are considered to be part of the United States.
    Territorial waters adjoining the land areas of
    the United States are also considered part of the
    U.S.

97
Out of Country (Continued)
  • Medicare may pay for inpatient hospital services
    received in Canada or Mexico if
  • A patient has a medical emergency and the
    Canadian or Mexican hospital is closer than the
    nearest U.S. hospital
  • A patient lives in the United States and the
    Canadian or Mexican hospital is closer to his
    home, even if there is no emergency
  • A patient is traveling through Canada without
    unreasonable delay by the most direct route
    between Alaska and another state and a medical
    emergency occurs

98
Participating and Non-participating Providers
99
Participating Providers
  • A participating provider is an institution
    approved by the Centers for Medicare Medicaid
    Services (CMS) that has agreed to
  • Accept Medicares payment based on the reasonable
    cost of the items and services provided
  • Not charge the beneficiary for covered items and
    services, except deductibles and coinsurance
  • Return any money incorrectly collected

100
Non-participating Providers
  • If there is a medical emergency, Medicare may pay
    for services provided in a non-participating
    hospital if that hospital is the closest one
    equipped to handle the emergency. Three separate
    conditions must exist
  • An emergency occurs that could result in death or
    serious impairment
  • The hospital is a qualified emergency services
    hospital
  • The diagnosis or treatment is given at the most
    accessible qualified hospital available and
    equipped to furnish the services

101
Discussion/Review
102
Discussion/Review
  • Is it possible to be in the hospital overnight
    and still not be considered an inpatient?

103
Discussion/Review
  • Yes. A beneficiary can stay one or more nights in
    a hospital and not be considered an inpatient.
    The physician decides whether or not to admit a
    beneficiary as an inpatient.
  • For an inpatient stay, the beneficiary is
    responsible for an inpatient deductible. If the
    beneficiary is an outpatient, he must pay the
    Part B deductible and coinsurance before Medicare
    begins to pay.

104
Discussion/Review (Continued)
  • A beneficiary asks, Why do I have to pay another
    Part A deductible? I already paid one this year.

105
Discussion/Review (Continued)
  • If a beneficiary has been out of the hospital or
    SNF for more than 60 consecutive days, a new
    benefit period begins. This means the beneficiary
    must pay another Part A deductible.

106
Discussion/Review (Continued)
  • What are lifetime reserve days?

107
Discussion/Review (Continued)
  • These are days a beneficiary holds in reserve in
    case he has a long illness and needs to stay in
    the hospital more than 90 straight days. Each
    beneficiary has 60 lifetime reserve days that he
    can use whenever he needs them. They can only be
    used once and are not renewable.

108
Discussion/Review (Continued)
  • What is the blood deductible? Does a Medicare
    beneficiary always have to pay this deductible?

109
Discussion/Review (Continued)
  • The blood deductible is the first three pints of
    blood per calendar year. There are two ways a
    patient can meet the blood deductible
  • Pay the fees assessed for the first three pints
  • Donate blood to replace what was used or arrange
    for another person or blood-replacement
    organization to do so. A hospital or SNF cannot
    charge a beneficiary for any of the first three
    pints of blood that a beneficiary replaces or
    arranges to have replaced.

110
Discussion/Review (Continued)
  • Hospice agencies are paid based on the level of
    care provided. What are the four levels of
    hospice care?

111
Discussion/Review (Continued)
  • The four levels of hospice care are
  • Routine
  • Continuous
  • Inpatient respite
  • General inpatient
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