Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Double-check when they say the rehab center doesn’t have room

- JULIAN GRAY AND FRANK PETRICH

We’ve become aware of some hospital discharge situations that raised a significan­t element of concern relative to the ability of the discharged patient to select the nursing or rehabilita­tion facility of their choice.

In two recent examples, patients were told that the facility to which they wanted to go and with which they were familiar had “no available beds.”

This was not true, as the facilities did have available beds and every morning those facilities contacted the hospitals stating their bed availabili­ty.

Another patient — not in a position to decide for himself — had two hours for his family to choose the hospital-offered facility that was not convenient for the patient’s family and also was a lowrated Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services facility (two

stars out of a five-star rating system).

What to do? Trust and verify. Call the facility you want yourself to verify bed availabili­ty and its acceptance of your insurance coverage. All the more reason to be familiar with long-term care facilities in your area in the event of a need for their services.

Federal law requires that hospitals have a process to identify and plan for Medicare patients’ needs after they are discharged. This discharge will occur when you no longer have a need for inpatient care and are able to go home or have a need for another type of facility. That might be a nursing facility for long term care needs or for rehabilita­tion services.

The secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services is charged with developing standards and guidelines for the discharge planning process.

What is to be included in the process?

The hospital is to identify, at an early stage of hospitaliz­ation, those patients likely to suffer adverse health consequenc­es upon discharge in the absence of adequate discharge planning. Hospitals are to provide a discharge planning evaluation for these patients and, also, for other patients upon the request of the patient, patient’s representa­tive or patient’s physician.

Furthermor­e, the evaluation is to be done on a timely basis to ensure that appropriat­e arrangemen­ts for post-hospital care will be made before discharge and to avoid unnecessar­y delays.

What’s to be included in the evaluation?

It is to include an evaluation of a patient’s likely need for appropriat­e post-hospital services, including hospice care and post-hospital extended care services, and the availabili­ty of those services. That includes the availabili­ty of home health services through individual­s and entities that participat­e in Medicare and that serve the area in which the patient lives.

The discharge planning evaluation is to be included in the patient’s medical record to help establish an appropriat­e plan and the results must be discussed with the patient (or the patient’s representa­tive). In addition, if the patient’s physician requests, the hospital must arrange for the developmen­t and initial implementa­tion of a discharge plan.

Any evaluation or discharge plan required by Medicare must be developed by, or under the supervisio­n of a registered profession­al nurse, social worker or other appropriat­ely qualified personnel.

The plan is not to specify or otherwise limit the qualified provider which may provide post-hospital home health services. The plan is to also identify if the hospital has a discloseab­le financial interest in the rehab center or other provider, or if those have such an interest in the hospital.

Choosing a facility is often a stressful chore for the patient and family members.

With hospitals dischargin­g patients “quicker and sicker” than in the past, the importance of good plans becomes even more important.

The issues of whether the patient is, in fact, “dischargab­le” is beyond the scope of this article and one that we will address in a future article relative to Medicare Appeal rights through the appropriat­e quality improvemen­t organizati­on.

Our primary concern now is to raise awareness that the patient or patient’s representa­tive needs to be assertive in double-checking options offered by the dischargin­g facility.

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