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Article: Hospice and Medicare Part A
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Texas Hospice Care

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Serving the Texas counties of Bastrop, Bell, Blanco, Burleson, Burnett, Caldwell, Comal, Coryell, Fayette, Gillespie, Gonzales, Guadalupe, Hays, Kendall, Lampasas, Lee, Llano, Robertson, Travis and Williamson.

The Texas Department of Human Services is responsible for regulating and licensing of Hospice programs.

Hospice care is a comprehensive and special type of medical and supportive social, emotional, and spiritual care provided to the terminally ill and their families. The goal of Hospice care is to help end or ease pain and other troubling symptoms of an illness, rather than treatment aimed at curing the illness, as well as providing comfort and support.

Medicare Part A helps pay for inpatient care in hospitals and in skilled nursing facilities. It also helps cover hospice care and some home-health care. You must meet certain conditions to get these benefits. Medicare does not pay all of these costs. You or your separate insurance must pay some of these costs, too.

Medicare Part A
Most people do not have to pay a monthly fee or premium for Part A. That is because they or their spouse paid Medicare taxes while they were working.

Medicare Part A helps pay for the cost of:

• hospital stays
• short-term skilled nursing home stays, following a hospital stay
• home health care
• hospice care

How Much You and Medicare Pay for Hospital Care
(In 2010)

Number of Days

You Pay

 

Medicare Pays

Days 1-60

$1,100 deductible (per benefit period), then nothing

 

The rest

Days 61-90

$275 per day

The rest

Days 91-150*

$550 per day

The rest

All additional days

Everything

Nothing

* Days 91-150 (60 days) are called "lifetime reserve days." They can be used after you have been in the hospital 90 days. You don't need to use these lifetime reserve days all at once. There are 190 lifetime reserve days for stays in a psychiatric hospital.

In the hospital, Medicare Part A helps pay for:
• semi-private room and meals
• resident and intern services
• nursing services
• medical social services
• drugs, shots, and blood for use in the hospital
• equipment, such as wheelchairs, and medical supplies
• physical therapy
• planning for follow-up care

In the hospital, Medicare Part A does not pay for:
• private-duty nursing (you hire your own private nurse)
• private rooms (unless the doctor says you need a private room for your health)
• television
• telephone

Care in a Nursing Home
Medicare Part A helps pay for some of your stay in a nursing home. A skilled nursing facility is a place where you get skilled nursing or rehabilitative care from licensed health professionals. Help from family members or care you give yourself is not considered skilled nursing care.

You must meet these conditions for Medicare to help pay for your care in a nursing home:
• You need to have been in the hospital for three or more days before you go to a skilled nursing home. Your care must begin within 30 days after you leave the hospital.
• Your doctor must order daily skilled nursing or rehabilitation services that you can get only in a skilled nursing home. "Daily" means seven days a week for skilled nursing services and five days a week or more for skilled rehabilitation services.
• You get these skilled services in a nursing home that has been approved by Medicare.

If you meet these conditions, Medicare pays for up to 100 days in a benefit period. A benefit period begins the day you go into the hospital or skilled nursing home. The benefit period ends when you have been out of the hospital or skilled nursing home for at least 60 days in a row. You pay a Part A deductible ($1,100 in 2010) for each new benefit period.

How Much You and Medicare Pay for Skilled Nursing Home Care 

(In 2010)

Number of Days

You Pay

Medicare Pays

Days 1-20

Nothing

Everything

Days 21-100

$137.50 per day

The rest

Over 100 days

Everything

Nothing

If you need care in a skilled nursing home at a later time, you must again meet the same conditions for Medicare to help pay for your care.

In a skilled nursing home, Medicare helps pays for:
• a semi-private room
• meals
• skilled nursing and rehabilitative services
• medical social services
• prescription drugs, medical supplies and equipment
• possible ambulance service
• dietary counseling
• other services, such as lab tests and X-rays

Care at Home 
Medicare Part A and Part B both help pay for home health care. Home health care is skilled nursing, rehabilitative, and other kinds of health care services that you get in your home to treat an illness or injury. (Medicare doesn’t pay for care to help you with activities of daily living, such as bathing, dressing, eating, or using the toilet.)

You must meet four conditions for Medicare to help pay for your home health care:

1. Your doctor must order medical care for you in your home and make a plan for that care.
2. You must need help from a skilled nurse or a physical, occupational, or speech therapist on a part-time basis. Medicare does not pay for these services round-the-clock (24 hours).
3. You must be homebound. This means it is very hard for you to leave your home because of your illness or injury.
4. You must get your care from a home-health care agency that is approved by Medicare.

What Medicare Pays
Medicare will pay for your home care for as long as you meet these conditions. Your doctor and home health care agency will review your plan of care at least every 60 days.

Medicare will pay for the following as part of your home health care:
• part-time skilled nursing care
• home health aides
• physical, occupational, or speech therapists
• medical social services or counseling to help you cope with your illness or injury
• medical equipment and supplies

What You Pay
You do not have to pay anything for these services as long as you meet the four conditions listed above. However, you must pay 20 percent of the cost of medical equipment and 100 percent of the costs of outpatient prescription drugs, unless you have drug coverage from Medicare Part D or another source.

Hospice Care
Medicare Part A will help pay for your hospice care. Hospice care is a special way of caring for people who are dying and for their family members. The focus of hospice care is to help make people as comfortable as possible at the end of their lives rather than try to cure their illness or injury. While you can receive hospice care in your home, a hospice facility, a nursing home, or a hospital, most people use hospice care at home.

You must meet these conditions for Medicare to pay for your hospice care:
• You must have or be able to get Medicare Part A.
• A doctor must say you are terminally ill.
• You, or the person who is making your health care decisions, must sign and send a form to Medicare to tell them you are choosing hospice care.*
 
• You must get care from a hospice approved by Medicare.

*Once you choose hospice care, you can’t use your Medicare benefits to cure your terminal illness. You can, however, get care for other health problems. If for any reason you stop hospice care, you will again get your health care from Medicare.

For example, Mary is getting hospice care for cancer. She is not using Medicare to continue chemotherapy or radiation to cure her illness. Unfortunately, while receiving hospice care, Mary fell and broke her wrist. Medicare will pay for treating her broken wrist.

What Medicare Pays
You get hospice care for up to two 90-day periods, followed by an unlimited number of 60 day periods. At the start of each period of care, your doctor must confirm that you are still terminally ill in order to continue the care.

Medicare pays for the following services as part of your hospice care:
• doctor and nursing care
• drugs to help control your pain
• dietary counseling
• counseling for you and your family
• short-term hospital care (including respite care)
• physical, occupational, and speech therapy
• medical social services
• home health aide and homemaker services
• medical supplies and equipment

What You Pay
You pay up to $5 for each prescription drug. You also pay 5 percent of the Medicare-approved amount for respite care. Respite care is short-term care given to you so that your caregiver can get some rest, run errands, or get away for a few days.

Source: www.aarp.org

 

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