Column: In-patient or
not? Medicare requires hospitals to tell you
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[September 29, 2016]
By Mark Miller
CHICAGO
(Reuters) - You are in the hospital for tests after experiencing
dizziness. You are nervous about what the tests will show, but at least
you do not have to worry about hospital bills - you have Medicare, so
you can relax about healthcare coverage. Or can you?
Not if you are in the hospital under “observation status” – a Medicare
designation applied to patients deemed insufficiently ill for formal
admission, but still too sick to be allowed to go home. Observation
status can result in thousands of dollars in higher costs - especially
if you need post-hospital nursing care.
Medicare covers care in skilled nursing facilities, but only for
patients who were first formally admitted to a hospital for three
consecutive days.
Federal data shows that the number of Medicare patients classified as
under observation has jumped sharply in recent years, and it has stirred
a great deal of pushback from Medicare enrollees and advocacy groups. A
new law - the Notice Act - requires hospitals to at least notify
patients if they stay in the hospital more than 24 hours without being
formally admitted. Patients will receive the warnings starting in
January, but advocates argue the new protection does not go far enough.
“It does half of what we would like to see,” said Toby Edelman, senior
policy attorney at the Center for Medicare Advocacy. “The notice should
also allow patients to appeal their status.”
Hospitals have been motivated to use the status to avoid costly
penalties from Medicare for improper admissions under a well-intentioned
effort by Medicare to control costs through a program that audits
hospitals for possible overpayments. The program began during the George
W. Bush administration.
The number of patients cared for under observation status doubled to
nearly 1.9 million in 2014 compared with 2006, according to figures from
the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS). The majority (54
percent) were for observation stays of less than 24 hours; another 38
percent of the stays were 48 hours or less, CMS reports.
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FACING HIGHER COSTS
The new notifications will require hospitals to inform patients orally
and in writing if they are on observation status for more than 24 hours.
The written notification, developed by CMS, is called the Medicare
Outpatient Observation Notice (MOON). The MOON also explains the cost
implications of receiving hospital services as an outpatient.
The costs of observation status can affect any enrollee on traditional
fee-for-service Medicare. (Beneficiaries using Medicare Advantage, which
provide all-in-one care, will also receive the MOON, but some Medicare
Advantage plans will cover a stay in a skilled nursing facility without
first requiring that patients have a three-day inpatient hospital stay.)
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Medicare normally covers up to a maximum of 100 days of care in a skilled
nursing facility following a hospital admission - it pays 100 percent for the
first 20 days, and patients are responsible for a daily $161 co-pay for the next
80 days. But patients leaving the hospital for a nursing facility after an
observation pay the full cost out of pocket.
RISING NURSING HOME COSTS
The cost of skilled nursing care is substantial, and rising quickly. This year,
the national median monthly cost of a private nursing room is $7,698, according
to a Genworth survey, and it runs much higher in states such as New York
($11,330 per month) and California ($9,338).
Medicaid would cover the stay if the patient meets the program's low-income
requirements (a status called “dual-eligible”). A commercial long-term care
policy might provide some coverage, although many of these policies have
"elimination" features (deductibles) that require patients to pay the first 90
days out of pocket.
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Observation status also affects coverage of drug usage in the hospital. Medicare
Part B would cover drug usage for the specific problem related to the
hospitalization, subject to Part B’s typical 20 percent copay); for routine
drugs that you take at home (say, a statin for high cholesterol), practices
vary. Some hospitals allow patients to bring their own drugs from home, others
do not, and charge much more than you would pay at a typical pharmacy.
Some -
but not all - Part D drug plans will cover some of these prescription drug
costs.
A broader fix to the observation status has garnered broad support from
organizations ranging from AARP to the American Medical Association, elder law
groups and Medicare advocacy groups. Legislation that has bipartisan support has
been introduced in the U.S. House and Senate that would require that time spent
in observation be counted toward meeting the three-day prior inpatient stay that
is necessary to qualify for Medicare coverage.
"The bill is simple,” said Edelman of the Center for Medicare Advocacy. “Count
the time in hospital, no matter what. If you are in the hospital for three
midnights, you have met this requirement."
(The writer is a Reuters columnist. The opinions expressed are his own.)
(Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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