Medicare Pilot Program Allows for Hospice Coverage
Some recipients of Medicare?s hospice benefit will no longer be forced to make a wrenching choice. A pilot program will allow...
Read moreMedicare's hospice benefit covers any care that is reasonable and necessary for easing the course of a terminal illness. It is one of Medicare's most comprehensive benefits and can be extremely helpful to both the terminally ill individual and his or her family, but it is little understood and underutilized. Understanding what is offered ahead of time may help Medicare beneficiaries and their families make the difficult decision to choose hospice if the time comes.
The focus of hospice is palliative care, which means helping people who are terminally ill and their families maintain their quality of life. Palliative care addresses physical, intellectual, emotional, social, and spiritual needs while also supporting the terminally ill individual's independence, access to information, and ability to make choices about health care.
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To qualify for Medicare's hospice benefit, a beneficiary must be entitled to Medicare Part A, and a doctor must certify that the beneficiary has a life expectancy of six months or less. If the beneficiary lives longer than six months, the doctor can continue to certify the patient for hospice care indefinitely. The beneficiary must also agree to give up any treatment to cure his or her illness and elect to receive only palliative care. This can seem overwhelming, but beneficiaries can also change their minds at any time. It's possible to revoke the benefit and reelect it later, and to do this as often as needed.
Medicare will cover any care that is reasonable and necessary for easing the course of a terminal illness. Hospice nurses and doctors are on-call 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, to give beneficiaries support and care when needed. Services are usually provided in the home. The Medicare hospice benefit provides for:
Services are considered appropriate if they are aimed at improving the beneficiary's life and making him or her more comfortable.
Because the beneficiary is electing palliative care over treatment, there are things the hospice benefit will not cover:
To download Medicare's booklet on the hospice benefit, click here.
For more information about Medicare's hospice benfit, click here.
Some recipients of Medicare?s hospice benefit will no longer be forced to make a wrenching choice. A pilot program will allow...
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