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Home hospice care usually costs less than care in hospitals,
nursing homes, or other institutional settings. This is because less
high-cost technology is used and family and friends provide most of the
care at home.
Medicare, Medicaid in some states, the Department of Veterans
Affairs, most private insurance plans, HMOs, and other managed care
organizations pay for hospice care. Along with this, community
contributions, memorial donations, and foundation gifts allow many
hospices to give free services to patients who can't afford payment.
Some programs charge patients according to their ability to pay.
Medicare hospice
To get payment from Medicare, the agency must be approved by
Medicare to provide hospice services.
To qualify for the Medicare hospice benefit, a doctor and the
hospice medical director (also a doctor) must certify that the patient
has less than 6 months to live if the disease runs its normal course.
The doctor must re-certify the patient at the beginning of each benefit
period (2 periods of 90 days each, then an unlimited number of 60-day
periods). The patient signs a statement that says he or she understands
the nature of the illness and of hospice care, and that he or she wants
to be admitted to hospice. By signing the statement, the patient
declines Medicare Part A and instead chooses the Medicare hospice
benefit for all care related to his or her cancer. The patient can
still receive Medicare benefits for other illnesses. A family member
may sign the statement if the patient is unable to do so.
Medicaid coverage
In 1986, laws were passed to allow the states to develop
coverage for hospice programs. Most states do have a Medicaid hospice
benefit, which is patterned after the Medicare hospice benefit.
Private insurance
Most private insurance companies include hospice care as a
benefit. Be sure to ask about your insurance coverage, not only for
hospice, but also for home care.
Private pay
If insurance coverage is not available or is not enough to
cover all costs, the patient and the family can hire hospice providers
and pay for services out of pocket. Some hospices are able to provide
services without charge if a patient has limited or no financial
resources.
Last Medical Review: 04/19/2009
Last Revised: 05/06/2009
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