My father was on hospice care for less than a month before passing after being in and out of the hospital for over a year. It’s been over 6 months and the equipment company hasn’t picked it up after we were told they’d be by in a few days. Can I sell this equipment? It was paid for by Medicaid/Medicare.
The billing would be on the patient's EOB (Explanation of Benefits). Look it up, call the supplier who billed it.
If you don't know if it was rented, or leased, or purchased, you should not dispose of it without contacting the hospice that provided it, imo, if you want to do the right thing.
If you want to quickly find it's value or who "owns" it, ask if you can buy it....your
information will be forthcoming in a hurry. lol.
If you know what rental company it is, call them directly. Call hospice and they can call the rental company if you don't have stickers with the rental company's name.
I would NOT sell or give away any non-disposable equipment (what I mentioned above). Down the road (inventory) you WILL be liable for it. As for the disposable stuff, (Chux, urinal, bedpan, anything plastic-oxygen tubing, liners for suction machine, salves, creams, lotions, skin cleaning products, anything that can't be sterilized or disinfected), you can keep. Those personal products would not be donatable.
Keep trying until someone responds to your request. The squeaky wheel gets the oil.
I would contact Hospice.
Hospice made all the arrangements for my dad's bed, wheelchair and bedtable to be picked up.
Everything was picked up the next day. Everything else was left for the family to decide what to do with. We had alot of diapers, creams, lotions, shampoos, chuxs and medication etc.
I would not want to get a bill down the road for this equipment so I would exhaust all measures to
to have them pick it up or advise you if you keep it. Whatever you do...get everything in writing.
Good luck
I am surprised the supplier hasn't come by to pick up the equipment. I know when I called the supplier for pick-up, I needed to be home for the driver to get my signature and to pick up the item. It was a brand new wheelchair that my Dad only used a couple of times. I was going to donate said wheelchair to the senior facility, thank goodness I didn't, that would have been major bucks out of Dad's pockets.
In fact, during summer you see private sales around here and every so often you'll see medical equipment show up in those sales that used to belong to someone who either no longer needs it or they died. Medical equipment especially canes, crutches, walkers, bedside toilets, and wheelchairs are common items sold around here. In fact, a good friend of mine who lost her special needs daughter still had her hospital crib her manual lift hoist when she died. She was able to sell that equipment to someone who gave it a good home. Another way to get medical equipment around here is if you know someone who is contracted to clean out empty buildings. You never know what you'll find in some of these homes and apartments or other buildings and medical equipment is often among things collected by a friend of mine living nearby. One time I got a free bedside toilet and I still have it in storage. I like the idea of donating old equipment but if you need that money real bad and the equipment is originally very expensive then I personally would sell it under your specific type of situation. Best yet, I wouldn't pay the bill after selling an item the company willingly refused to pick up especially for this long. If you had it for six months and they haven't picked it up by now, they probably won't
Call them again.
I ran into that with a C-Pap machine. One call and they came almost immediately.
Most equipment is picked up, sanitized and rented again.
Some equipment is single use, or single patient.
A commode chair is cleaned and rented again but the waste bucket is disposed of.
A lift is cleaned and rented again but some of the slings are single patient.
There should be a toll free number on the equipment contact the company and ask that they come and get the items. They will tell you if they are single patient or if they need to be returned.
Contact Hospice. Explain the situation and ask that the equipment be picked up.
It might have been that the paperwork for this may have been over looked. And it is possible that they have been paying rental on this equipment. (not a strong possibility but patient numbers on orders may have been mixed up and someone else had equipment that was picked up in error.)
In any case if after exhausting all possibilities if you are still stuck with this equipment and you want to get rid of it look in your area for a Senior Service that has a Medical Lending Closet. They will loan equipment to people that need it but can not afford rental. You will get a tax deduction for the donation. Selling used medical equipment does pose liability risks to both buyer and seller.
wheelchairs and oxygen concentrators. Things like walkers and commodes were puchased because they said they could not be sterilized and given to another patient. They were left at the patient's house and the caregivers could use them or get rid of them. When i had my first hip replacement I was told what I would need such as raised toilet seat, walker and comode. I was responsible for obtaining those and found them for a few $s each at various sales. That suited me just fine. needless to say I kept everything for future use.
How many times have you chased up the people who were supposed to collect it? Do that, set them a deadline, tell them if they haven't taken it away by [date] you're dumping it. I'd say end of next week is fair enough, bearing in mind how long they've already had.
I know that once Medicare pays for DME if you sell it, it may be unethical because accepting payment if Medicare paid can be considered fraud. Medicare should be reimbursed as they paid.
Tricky situation.
Either way, I'd be seriously concerned about eventual liability as sooner or later I would think an inventory would reveal that a bed is missing. And if you've sold it, you may be on the hook for it. Read the terms and conditions of use when the bed was delivered.
If you look at your fathers paperwork from Medicare you should be able to find the information needed to communicate with them.
You haven't had it long enough to own it if the rules are the same in your state. Obviously someone dropped the ball.