A. Admission to
hospice and subsequent election periods must be prior authorized through a
Utilization Management/Quality Improvement Organization (UM/QIO), the Division
of Medicaid, or designated entity.
B. The hospice provider must provide all
required services to meet the needs of the beneficiary related to the terminal
illness and related conditions.
C.
The Division of Medicaid covers medically necessary hospice services for
beneficiaries when the following criteria are met:
1. A written certification specifying the
beneficiary's medical prognosis is for a life expectancy of six (6) months or
less if the terminal illness runs its normal course and the written
certification is in accordance with
42 C.F.R. §
418.22 and the Mississippi State Department
of Health (MSDH) Minimum Standards of Operation for Hospice,
2. A beneficiary or a beneficiary's
guardian/legal representative has elected hospice care services for the
palliation and management of a beneficiary's terminal illness and related
conditions,
3. Services are
reasonable and necessary for the palliation and management of a beneficiary's
terminal illness and related conditions,
4. A plan of care (POC) is established, prior
to hospice care services beginning, which requires periodic review by the
attending physician, if any, the medical director, and the interdisciplinary
group of the hospice program, and
5. The hospice care services are consistent
with the beneficiary's established plan of care.
D. Hospice services are only covered for
palliative management of a terminal illness except for Early and Periodic
Screening, Diagnosis and Treatment (EPSDT)-eligible beneficiaries.
E. The hospice provider must develop and
maintain a system of communication and integration. Therefore, the hospice's
own policies and procedures must:
1. Ensure
that the interdisciplinary team/interdisciplinary group (IDT/IDG) maintains
responsibility for directing, coordinating, and supervising the care and
services provided.
2. Ensure that
the care and services are provided in accordance with the POC.
3. Ensure that the care and services provided
are based on all assessments of the beneficiary and family needs.
4. Provide for and ensure the ongoing sharing
of information between all disciplines providing care and services in all
settings, whether the care and services are provided directly or under
arrangement.
5. Provide for an
ongoing sharing of information with other non-hospice healthcare providers
furnishing services unrelated to the terminal illness and related conditions.
F. Persons enrolled in
Home and Community-Based Services (HCBS) waivers who elect to receive hospice
care may not receive HCBS waiver services which are duplicative of any services
rendered through hospice. Persons may receive non-duplicative HCBS waiver
services in coordination with hospice services.
G. The Division of Medicaid holds the hospice
provider liable for the following circumstances including, but not limited to:
1. Duplicative hospice and/or HCBS waiver
services, and/or
2. Failure to
fully utilize hospice benefits and palliative services related to the person's
terminal illness and related conditions prior to utilizing HCBS waiver
services.
H. The Division
of Medicaid defines:
1. Terminal illness as
an illness/condition with a prognosis of life expectancy of six (6) months or
less, if the illness/condition follows its normal course.
2. Hospice as a public agency or private
organization or subdivision of either of these that is primarily engaged in
providing hospice care to terminally ill beneficiaries and meets Medicare
Conditions of Participation for hospices and has a valid Medicaid provider
agreement.
3. Hospice care as a
comprehensive set of services, described in section 1861(dd)(1) of the Social
Security Act, identified and coordinated by an interdisciplinary group to
provide for the physical, psychosocial, spiritual, and emotional needs of a
terminally ill beneficiary and/or family members as delineated in a specific
plan of care for the beneficiary.
4. Palliative care as beneficiary and
family-centered care that optimizes quality of life by anticipating,
preventing, and treating suffering. Palliative care throughout the continuum of
illness involves addressing physical, intellectual, emotional, social, and
spiritual needs and to facilitate beneficiary autonomy, access to information,
and choice.
5. Hospice physician as
a doctor of medicine or osteopathy who is legally authorized to practice
medicine in the state of Mississippi and designated by the hospice to provide
care to hospice beneficiaries in coordination with the beneficiary's attending
physician, if the beneficiary has an attending physician.
6. Attending physician as a doctor of
medicine or osteopathy who is legally authorized to practice medicine in the
state of Mississippi or a nurse practitioner who meets training, education, and
experience requirements as described in
42 C.F.R. §
410.75 and in accordance with the Mississippi
Nurse Practice Act. The attending physician is identified by the beneficiary,
at the time he or she elects to receive hospice care, as having the most
significant role in the determination and delivery of the beneficiary's medical
care.
7. False claims as a term
used when a person knowingly makes an untrue statement or claim to gain a
benefit or reward.
8. Election
statement as a written statement electing hospice care filed by a beneficiary
or the beneficiary's guardian/legal representative with a hospice
provider.
9. Prior authorization as
the process of reviewing a request for services and determining beneficiary
eligibility, coverage, medical necessity, and appropriateness of services.
Refer to Miss. Admin. Code Part 205, Rule 1.11 for required
documentation.
10. Election period
as a predetermined timeframe for which a beneficiary may elect to receive
Medicaid coverage of hospice care during the beneficiary's lifetime. Election
periods consist of:
a) An initial ninety
(90)-day period once in a lifetime,
b) A subsequent ninety (90)-day period once
in a lifetime, and
c) Subsequent
sixty (60)-day periods with unlimited increments which require face-to-face
encounters with a hospice physician or hospice nurse
practitioner.
11.
Reasonable and necessary as safe and effective services which are not
experimental or investigational and are appropriate, including the duration and
frequency in terms of whether the item or service is:
a) Furnished in accordance with accepted
standards of medical practice for the diagnosis or treatment of the
beneficiary's condition or to improve the function of a malformed body
member,
b) Ordered and furnished in
a setting appropriate to the beneficiary's medical needs and condition, and
c) One that meets, but does not
exceed, the beneficiary's medical need.
12. Period of crisis as a period in which a
beneficiary requires continuous care which is primarily nursing care to achieve
palliation or management of acute medical symptoms.
13. Bereavement counseling as emotional,
psychosocial, and spiritual support and services provided before and after the
death of the patient to assist with issues related to grief, loss, and
adjustment.
42 C.F.R. Part 418;
Miss. Code Ann. §
43-13-121.