Has anyone had any experience with appealing to Medicare under the provision allowing such an appeal when the patient or authorized party disagrees with a doctor's decision to discharge?
The PCP has decided to discharge my father tomorrow even though he (a) can't stand (b) has heart rate, BP, and SAT rate that are higher than normal, (c) lives alone (d) won't get any home care until the day following discharge?
I intend to call the Medicare specified contractor tomorrow to appeal the decision, but honestly expect a runaround or support of the doctor's irresponsible decision.
Anyone have any experience with this short term rapid appeal process?
The doctor came in and pretty much said, what the heck?! I said, my father does not feel he is ready to go home. Now the doctor spoke with my dad and asked him why. My dad was allowed to stay the extra day and then he decided he was ready and was discharged.
Patients have rights and there are people within the hospital you can contact for just this scenario. Patient Advocates.
Regarding warfarin for elders with fall risk -- My mother has a-fib and is on both warfarin and baby aspirin. She has a cerebral aneurysm. The neurologist didn't want her on both warfarin and baby aspirin, but the cardiologist did and overruled the neurologist. My mother has bad balance, and although she hasn't fallen yet, she is a fall risk. (She has no sight in one eye, horrible depth perception, sometimes gets a feeling that is somewhere between dizziness and panicky.)
It takes a lot of time, and reading to understand, but I will be doing my best to pass this info on to the person (or persons) in the family who seem to be in charge. (OR NOT IN CHARGE! so far!) No details to protect the guilty, but I may have to call in some help in the form of APS to kick sum butt!
Well, Dr. No Bedside Manners as I've now named him became annoyed when Dad challenged that he would be on oxygen for the rest of his life, then treated Dad like a child. (Dad was told 12 years ago he was in a terminal condition, but IF he did live he'd never walk again or get off a ventilator).
Dr. NBM became annoyed at Dad's response to having to use oxygen 24/7 at home, turned to Dad's visitors, and advised him on the situation, completely ignoring my father as if he were still a child.
How rude! It's probably a good thing I wasn't there or my response meter and protectiveness index might have soared off the chart. Treating my father as if he wasn't there was inexcusable.
It reminded me then that hospitalists might not be such a good idea if they don't have a lot of patient experience, and OLDER PATIENT experience. Without a practice outside of hospital rounds, they won't get to know the patient and his/her personality as they would if they treated the patient before and/or after hospitalization. Another conundrum for the medical pros to work out.
JB, thanks; I'm glad that my post was of help. You're right - there are a lot of good answers here to save for future reference.
FF, I'm hoping your father hasn't had any heart attacks since going off Warfarin?
It's interesting and sometimes frightening how many issues arise and interact with each other as we age.
(I'm trying to think of a way to write a book on all these experiences in a funny manner - maybe it would support me in my old age. Oh, wait, I'm already old!)
We often have to navigate the complex hills, valleys, floods and deserts of medical treatment without much guidance, let alone a map. And GPS doesn't operate for medical routes!
1. I think the error in not calling me to advise of the discharge might have been due to a new discharge planner, too many patients to handle, or other issues. People make mistakes, so I’m chalking it up to that but still making suggestions that it be charted or something else done to double check so that a mistake in not calling a patient’s family for discharge notification can be caught by someone else. Redundancy can help in reducing this kind of what possibly was just human error.
2. We’ve resolved one of the medical issues ourselves, made our decisions and moved on. It’s now past tense. But the decision was made by my father and me as to his best interests, short and long term, factoring in hospital recommendations as well as the fact that decisions were made during acute conditions which have already changed since he’s been home.
3. I’ve learned from another medical provider that the “quick in, quick out” philosophy applies even more now based on Medicare positions. So as soon as the criteria for controlling and/or improving, but not necessarily completely curing, the diagnosis/diagnoses are met, the exit door is the next destination.
I haven’t researched Medicare regs but suspect that this also applies to certain diagnoses, and perhaps not all diagnoses. It may even be an unwritten rule which providers adhere to but isn’t made public for patients.
So I'll be prepare for unanticipated, early discharges and from now on will just automatically carry oxygen in the car!
4. A dozen or so years ago, my father wouldn’t have been discharged while still battling pneumonia. Based on information and my understanding of it, that has changed to the criteria of when a patient is RESPONDING to treatment, but not necessarily cured of the pneumonia.
Apparently this is the new norm for Medicare patients.
5. The issue of the medicine change which was of such concern I now understand is an issue of balance. Based on information from one of our other medical providers as well as some research I’ve done, the choice to D/C warfarin and increase the aspirin dose is based on a sliding scale of offset issues.
6. Someone with A-fib who is younger and less likely to be injured in a fall understandably might be a safer candidate for anticoagulation therapy than someone in his/her 80’s or 90’s or even 100’s with a higher fall potential. Age is definitely a factor, as well as other factors, such as hypertension and diabetes, in determining the choice of anticoagulation meds and aspirin vs. just aspirin.
As fall risk increases, the danger of bleeding from a fall involving head trauma can also increase, becoming more of an important factor in balancing the risk of stroke (b/c of A-fib and anticoagulation ) vs. hemorrhaging.
If falling and possible brain hemorrhage is a greater risk, the anticoagulation is D’C’ed.
However, there is also some good research I found indicating that the risk is greater for stroke, than for internal bleeding after a fall, and that anticoagulation therapy shouldn’t be D'C'ed.
7. So it’s apparently an issue of what the physician believes, without necessarily consulting a cardiologist, as was the case in my father’s situation. I understand now why the hospitalist did what he did, although I think he should have consulted the treating cardiologist, which didn’t happen.
8. The issue of hospitalists vs. private practice doctors is an interesting and apparently evolving one. A medical professional told me that hospitals have more control over hospitalists, rounds can be made at more predictable times, etc. But they don't treat privately, so there's no continuity of care that would exist if a specialist or a PCP were the attending physician during hospitalization.
That means the hospitalist really doesn't know the patient or his or her attitude toward medicine, toward exercise, healing, family involvement and other important issues.
Perhaps it's the old question whether a physician treats the illness or treats the patient.
Sometime during a nice windy, blustery fall day (which isn't far off) I'll do some research just out of curiosity to see if there are other issues in this hospitalist vs. private care doctor situation.
My father is improving, at a faster rate than he initially did in the hospital (sure helps to be in one's comfortable chair, in comfortable clothing and wrapped up in warm cozy blankets!), so in retrospect I’m glad he was discharged when he was.
Still, this has been another learning experience. I’m starting my own manual of questions and answers in a database so I can quickly figure out what the hospital might be doing if Dad is hospitalized again with similar diagnoses.
I really do hope our experiences will help others, as sometimes doctors and hospitals can operate in mysterious ways.
Thanks again to everyone, and if I don't get back to respond to each of you, I really do appreciate your advice and assistance.
There was no discussion of discharge until I was ready to leave the hospital after visiting on Friday. Just as I was in fact leaving, the nurse of the day came in and said she's ready to discharge Dad. No prior notice, no one had the courtesy to call me. So of course I didn't bring anything with me for the discharge, specifically the oxygen tanks.
To say I was disgusted if not more than that is an understatement. I was MAD! Before packing up, I thought about options:
1. To refuse to take him home would have really hurt Dad's feelings and he would have felt abandoned. But he would have called a friend who would have picked him up. So that really wouldn't have accomplished anything.
2. I did refuse to sign the discharge papers. The nurse advised me that by giving me a copy, I was agreeing to their terms. I advised her I'd never seen such a provision, and that the electronic signature which she inferred was created was NEVER authorized by me; I never signed any such consent. She wasn't prepared for that and moved away from that issue, stating that the discharge papers didn't have to be signed anyway.
I actually felt kind of bad for her b/c it was as if she was the messenger with the bad news while the doctor just wrote the order and left everything to someone else - which is as it should be it the "someone elses" know that the discharge was ordered. They're not mind readers.
3. There were some medical issues that I've addressed outside of the hospital circle, and the 2 issues that remain will be raised this week in doctor appointments.
4. One issue that was especially ridiculous was the irresponsibility of whoever was in charge of discharge notifications. But I did glance at the assignment board and saw that the nurses apparently have a maximum load of patients, and it may be that the discharge planner's patient load is the same, although in my experience they plan discharge right from the beginning so there wasn't that much to be done.
5. The scripts for DME supplies were given to me, not faxed as they should have been to the DME suppliers. That changed when I complained, and the discharge planner made arrangements to get one aspect of the supplies from the hospital's own supplier.
6. There obviously was no way to provide oxygen on the way home, I refused to go home, get a tank and return, so a tank had to be borrowed, again from the hospital's DME supplier. But I'm responsible for taking it back. I'm thinking of submitting an invoice to them for time and mileage charges. Seriously. That screw-up was a major one.
7. The hospitalist changed a med regime that's been in place and successful for 11 years, w/o any explanation. I'll address that with our regular doctors, but I thought it was idiotic and irresponsible to discontinue a cardiac med that's been determined to be necessary by the cardiologist (who wasn't consulted).
8. The bigger reluctance though, was whether Dad was ready. However, he hadn't been getting any support for several hours except from the cafeteria and wandering staff who stopped by to say hello (that was a nice gesture). All other services had been D'C'ed. I thought that odd, but never realized it until advised the discharge had been signed that morning, but nothing was done about it until the afternoon. Again, the nurse apparently had a full load of patients, so she may have had patients with more immediate needs.
9. The best answer was provided though after Dad was home, warm and comfortable. By Saturday night he was so much better, with so much improvement, that it was in fact good that he was discharged.
10. I intend to address the screw-up issues with the hospital Admin and the Customer Service follow-up rep, from the perspective that:
(a) the hospital has been providing good service and care for years
(b) perhaps there are some issues of which Admins are unaware that should be addressed to continue that level of care
(c) I'd prefer to continue going there than go to another hospital but I will switch if necessary
(d) so I'm making recommendations and suggestions, with the request they have the courtesy to advise me if these changes are implemented so I can decide whether or not to find another hospital and
(e) I'd hope that they could resolve this at hospital level but may just contact the corporate parent for advice on how to handle my concerns.
That should be like involving an unwanted in law, so I'm hoping they jump on the suggestions.
Given that this hospital is now for profit, I'm hoping they also see the $$$$ flying away toward another hospital and move on my suggestions.
Interesting social re-allocation in terms of diminishing funds for one large inclusive category to fund another large by highly defined category, which by the way doesn't benefit us at all because we take few meds.
But it's a method of medical/social engineering.
Let's not forget that health insurance companies can no longer cancel your policies because you have become too expensive, or deny you coverage because of a pre-existing condition. Some people are born with pre-existing conditions and had difficulty finding health insurance.
The list goes on and on.
Dad is home, and in the short and long run it's probably for the better as once he reached a certain level, the exit doors opened widely and hands began pushing him out. More on that later.
Llama, I'm sorry that your mother's death was under what probably was frustrating and trying circumstances.
If he or she wasn't involved in the in-hospital care, he/she could still get a new patient if the hospital refers follow-up care to that doctor. I experienced that once but one visit to the referred to follow-up doctor convinced me that she was a waste of time. But she did make money from my visit!
Have you experienced so-called follow-ups by ACOs? I did some research on these when they first started calling following hospital discharge and learned some interesting facts about physician involvement with these for profit organizations. So they too do benefit when an ACO follows up.
Sometimes I think of a medical/pharmaceutical/ or medical/hospital/ACO/referral complex, somewhat akin to the military/industrial complex.
I might do some research to see if I can find out who determines what qualifies when a patient can be released....i.e., is it the standard of care in the area, by hospital, by specific illness and/or combinations thereof, by certain vital standards, by specific medical specialities, or by those anonymous and unknown "experts" employed by Medicare?
Our home care experience has been similar to yours: next day start, first time assessment (which I can understand) and some monitoring, but limited home care b/c when certain standards are met, home care stops.
First day home is rough.
I suppose it's good that the patient progresses on home care, but it also means that family or the patient need to continue PT or monitoring on their own, which isn't always feasible.
I'm sorry to learn of your father's unfortunate experience, and hope that eventually he was able to recover. Is he doing better now?