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Residents of skilled nursing facilities can leave their facility to
attend a family holiday celebration without losing their Medicare
coverage! The Medicare Benefit Policy Manual recognizes that
although most beneficiaries are unable to leave their facility,
an outside pass or short
leave of absence for the purpose of attending a special religious
service, holiday meal, family occasion, going on a car ride, or for
a trial visit home, is not, by itself evidence that the individual
no longer needs to be in a SNF for the receipt of required skilled
care.[1]
A
facility should not notify patients that leaving the facility will
lead to loss of Medicare coverage. Such a notification is "not
appropriate," says the Manual.
If the
resident returns to the facility by midnight, the facility can bill
Medicare for the day’s stay.[2]
If the
resident is gone overnight (i.e., past midnight) and returns to the
facility the next day, the day the resident leaves is considered a
leave of absence day. While the facility cannot bill Medicare for
leave of absence days[3], it is today unclear whether the facility
can bill the beneficiary for those days.
As the
Center for Medicare Advocacy has reported in prior years, Chapter 6
of the Medicare Claims Processing Manual says that the facility
cannot bill a beneficiary during a leave of absence.[4]
However, a new provision in Chapter 1 of the Medicare Claims
Processing Manual, issued May 30, 2008, authorizes skilled nursing
facilities to bill a beneficiary for bed-hold during a temporary
"SNF Absence" if the SNF informs the resident in advance of the
option to make bed-hold payments and of the amount of the charge and
if the resident "affirmatively elect[s]" to make bed-hold payments
prior to being charged.[5]
Whether these apparently contradictory provisions in the Medicare
Claims Processing Manual can be reconciled remains to be seen.
The
Center for Medicare Advocacy wishes everyone a safe, happy, healthy
holiday season.
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[1] Medicare Benefit Policy
Manual, Pub. 100-02, Ch. 8, §30.7.3. (http://www.cms.hhs.gov/manuals/Downloads/bp102c08.pdf).
[2] Medicare Benefit Policy
Manual, Pub. 100-02, Ch. 3, §20.1.2. (http://www.cms.hhs.gov/manuals/Downloads/bp102c03.pdf).
[3] Medicare Claims
Processing Manual, Pub. 100-04, Ch. 6, §40.3.5.2. (http://www.cms.hhs.gov/manuals/downloads/clm104c06.pdf).
[4] Medicare Claims
Processing Manual, Pub. 100-04, Ch. 6, §40.3.5.2. (http://www.cms.hhs.gov/manuals/downloads/clm104c06.pdf).
[5] Medicare Claims
Processing Manual, Pub. 100-04, Ch. 1, §30.1.1.1 (http://www.cms.hhs.gov/manuals/downloads/clm104c01.pdf).
CMS cites, as authority for this payment option, the Nursing Home
Reform Law, 42 U.S.C. §1395i-3(c)(1)(B)(iii), which requires that
SNFs "inform each other resident, in writing before or at the time
of admission and periodically during the resident’s stay, of
services available in the facility and of related charges for such
services, including any charges for services not covered under this
subchapter or by the facility’s basic per diem charge." CMS also
cites 42 C.F.R. §483.10(b)(5)-(6). |