My 85-year old MIL suffers from dementia, is unable to walk because her knees have deteriorated badly, has a blood clot in her lung and is bleeding internally. She is not a candidate for surgery because of a heart condition (anaesthesia would probably kill her.) She and my FIL live in the independent living section of a CCF. She was recently hospitalized with rapid heart rate, low BP (80/40) and delirium.
When she was released from the hospital, the nursing home did an evaluation and said that she is not in need of skilled nursing care.
How sick does someone have to be to qualify for skilled nursing care under the Medicare guidelines?
And what is their definition of "skilled nursing care?"
Thanks for any information you can share.
I'm sorry if I confused the issue by asking about Medicare. My basic question was that I wanted to know how sick somebody has to be for the medical community to consider them in need of skilled nursing care.
It seems clearer to me now. It would help me also if any of you out there have a loved one who was released from hospital to nursing home, can you give me details, for example, what their diagnosis was, and why they required "skilled nursing care."
Thanks in advance! I appreciate your help.
You have Part A and have days left in your benefit period.
You have a qualifying hospital stay. (3 days)
Your doctor has ordered that you need daily skilled care given by, or under the direct supervision of, skilled nursing or rehabilitation staff. If you're in the SNF for skilled rehabilitation services only, your care is considered daily care even if these therapy services are offered just 5 or 6 days a week, as long as you need and get the therapy services each day they're offered.
You get these skilled services in a SNF that's certified by Medicare.
You need these skilled services for a medical condition that was either:
•A hospital-related medical condition.
•A condition that started while you were getting care in the skilled nursing facility for a hospital-related medical condition.
Discharge planners are often led astray the patients who insist they are fine and that their family can take care of things, so they are released. If they can get to the bathroom, eat unaided and answer the questions, off they go.
As you said, review the contract then meet with them.
And, "sympavt'. If your in-laws are in a true CCRC, then your MIL should be able to move to the community's SNF (or AL, depending upon her needs). Again, I don't understand why the concern about Medicare guidelines. This is a question for the staff and director of the CCRC. Review the contract, then meet with them.
I think the type of CCF or CCRC will make a huge difference in how they will direct and evaluate her care. I sense you feel that mom's situation is going to happen again and then what to do, who to turn to...... You should go over the admissions contract with the CCF or CCRC. Did they do a big $$$ buy-in to be there and what happens if the facility cannot provide the level of care either of them need? Not both of them but either of them. All that should be in the contract.
My aunt was in a CCRC and it was some kinda expensive buy-in, she got ill within her first couple of months there and passed away. I was executrix of her estate and the contract she did with the CCRC was so one-sided in their favor as they controlled how the unit would be dealt with for sale, etc. My aunt was a widow so there was no well & healthy spouse left @ the CCRC but had there been, he would have had to stay @ the CCRC or if he moved they would be in default for their agreement. In may ways it was lucky she died because they would not and could not provide the level of care she would have needed. It was one of those happy retirement village types and their higher level of care unit was small and really just a way station for the resident to get moved to a true skilled nursing facility that was NOT a part of the CCRC. Look about to see what this place really can provide for the long term for your mom. If it can't, then look over the contract to see what can be done to get them moved and into a "tiered" facility with skilled nursing.
"Medicare covers semi-private rooms, meals, skilled nursing and rehabilitative services, and other medically necessary services and supplies after a 3-day minimum medically-necessary inpatient hospital stay for a related illness or injury. An inpatient hospital stay begins the day you're formally admitted with a doctor's order and doesn't include the day you're discharged. To qualify for care in a skilled nursing facility, your doctor must certify that you need daily skilled care like intravenous injections or physical therapy."
What's happening for a lot of folks lately is that hospitals are keeping Medicare patients in on "observation" outpatient status and not formally admitting them as inpatient, which means Medicare will not cover a skilled nursing facility stay. It also means the patient often gets huge hospital bills for things Medicare won't cover during an "observation" stay, or stays in a nursing facility and later finds out Medicare didn't pay, so they have to. The Center for Medicare Advocacy has taken several legal actions against government agencies to end this practice.