My husband is receiving in-home help in the form of a PCA for a certain number of hours a week, and also homemaking services once a week, through Elderly Waiver. When the time comes for Hospice, will those services continue, or be replaced by hospice care?
The nurse who did the intake was so nice, she came over and said "I am coming back to you with my tail between her legs." She explained Hospice is supplemental, they come when they can, and if they dont have anyone, they dont come. She said Mom is a 2 person assist and most at her stage are in a nursing home, although I am here to help but I need a strong person. (My husband and I can roll her together to get her hoyer sling off at bedtime but he leaves at 5am for work)
I am not knocking Hospice here, just want to tell you my story and I am sure others will. I signed out of Hospice and hired my part time CNA every morning, she is fabulous and I am broke, lol.
After I signed up in the beginning, the Nurse said to me "now dont call the ambulance or go to the hospital or doctors and dont buy any medication , call us for everything day or night and we will mail you a medication kit to not open "unless we tell you." (it never came)
WHAT? When I called originally and asked I was told I could still do all of those things, but guess what, if you do, you pay. From Hospice on, you are dependent on them and cannot use medicare for coverage unless they approve. I am glad I am out of it and when I signed out, she asked, "and who do you want her doctor to be now?" I was shocked, as Moms been to the same doctor for over 20 years, to think they removed that priviledge even temporarily erks me.
Since then I talked to a friend I met at daycare years ago and her Mom also had Hospice, she said there were days Mom wasnt ever changed and they were to change her daily at the center as she was in a reclining wheelchair all day and a 2 person assist also. A long time friend just had her husband pass away in a Nursing Home of cancer 2 weeks ago, she told me when her husband needed morphine they had to "call" Hospice and it was hours before anyone could come, she was furious and wish she never signed on. Finally Hospice gave the Nursing Home the authority to give that Morphine for them as they had no one available.
So, as far as other services, make sure you know these things and dont let them fool you. Yes you can call and ambulance and go to the hospital and your doctor but you will pay for it out of pocket.Yes they will send an Aide, but when they want to. I hope this helps and please no one take offense. I decided to do things without them and use moms doctor and be in charge, not having them call the shots for my Mom. Hope some of this helps you.
We all pay for Meeicare during our working lives and 2.9% of salary, 1.49% from our pay check and the same from our employer goes to Medicare to cover costs. So that's why its an entitlement, you have previously paid the bill
As far as hoyer lifts, they can have their problems and presume the patient's ability to be placed in the sling properly. Training for caregivers is needed but they can save the caregiver's back and be a safer way to move a patient who can no longer stand or walk.
thx
I realize that hospice is covered by Medicare, which is an entitlement program, and that we will not be billed. What I am concerned about is not the hospice side of things, but the Medcaid/Elderly Waiver side. That is not an entitlement program, but my husband qualified for it several years ago.
In my observations locally, hospice does not seem to provide the level of daily in-home care Hubby is receiving now. My question is, would accepting hospice disqualify us for the Elderly Waiver services?
I've spoken with a hospice administrator, who says they will coordinate to make sure no duplicate services are received. That if we are getting homemaking services through Edlerly Waiver, they will simply not provide homemaking services. Fair enough, if it works that way.
I also have a question in to the case manager for the Elderly Waiver benefits. I will share what I find out there.
a) Hospice. Enrollees who elect to enroll in the Medicare Hospice program 10 while enrolled in MSHO are not required to disenroll from the MCO’s MSHO 11 product.
It looks (to me) like you would be able to have the same services but the EW case mgr will tell you for sure. (Unless I have the wrong pgm)
Is your husband nearing hospice time? I'm starting to get ready for that move for my Mom. Thinking of you. geewiz
When my Dad was on Hospice, everything was paid for under Medicare and not medicaid, Dad got better and srvices under Medicaid returned. Now my Mom is under Hospice care in the Nursing home, and Hospice is in charge but the Nursing home still provides meals, and meds. Hospice comes in when Mom is having a server panic episode, showers, company, counseling, chaplancy, social worker all under medicare. When I say in charge, I mean Hopice over rules the Nursing Home but I still over rule them all! I am still the POA!
I'm told it will be the same regardless of where the person is, nursing home, home or a hospice home.
I hope this helps, thanks for all the help you have provided us with.
Best wishes!
Elderly Waiver = component of Medicaid that supports recipient in his or her home, instead of in a nursing home. For example, this program paid for Adult Health Day Program, and when Hubby's ability to attend that declined, now pay for a PCA. The total cost cannot exceed what it would cost to place the recipient in a nursing home.
If the patient is also on Medicaid (including Elderly Waiver), he continues in that program, and items that are paid for through that program go through whatever approval processes are in place for that. For example this might include homemaking services, aides, or incontinence supplies. If a patient is already getting a service, Hospice will not duplicate it. If there is already an aide who helps with baths, Hospice will not send a volunteer or paid person to do that task.
At least that is my understanding now. I'll let you know if my experience doesn't match that!
PS On one morning I had my CNA here to help me and Hospice said that they wont need to come on that day if I have help. I said I PAY her. They shouldnt know if you have help because if you do, you are put on the bottom of the list. fyi
I am wanting someone knowledgable to help me understand the dying process. I want explanations of what is going on in my husband's body. I want someone to talk to about whether to encourage eating, and when to stop the encouragement. I want quick access to meds to eliminate pain, if that becomes an issue. I want to ensure as much comfort as possible in spite of increasingly difficult symptoms.
I am not expecting or looking for caregiving help. If baths become more difficult I may want help with that, but right now our PCA can handle that. I don't expect them to use one of their precious volunteers to assist me when I already have assistance through the Elderly Waiver program. They have explained that they will not duplicate services I already have. I accept that. I just wanted to be sure I wouldn't lose the services we already have, and now I've been assured on that score.
Medicare is paying for the equipment Hospice might order, so I assume (as you have confirmed) that I could get the equipment without Hospice. I've already been trying for a hospital bed his doctor ordered. That was about four weeks ago -- we don't have it yet. It has to go through channels, I'm told. But Hospice says they don't have to go through the same channels, that they are authorized to make decisions on their own, and they get equipment delivered the same or next day. Even if it took the same length of time, I would soooo welcome someone else coordinating and doing the phonework, followups, etc. Also I'm hoping that with their experience and coming into the house regularly they may spot something he needs or that would help him that I wouldn't even think of.
I've certainly had loved ones die. But I've never been intimately involved in the entire dying process. I want some help for me, to understand the process, as well as for my husband, to make the process as comfortable as it can be.
So, what I am hoping for doesn't seem to be what you were expecting. I think that will make a difference in our evaluation of the program's usefulness. I'll let you know!
I am glad you posted. It may help others have more realistic expectations of what Hospice can do for them.