Guest guest Posted June 4, 2012 Report Share Posted June 4, 2012 We are struggling with finding a tool that will allow us to pull up the beneficiary annual use --- if as it appears - hospitals will come under cap effective October 1 - I am assuming we will have to be aware of all beneficiary use of PT OT and ST services since beneficiary year beginning January 1. That to me makes it critical we be able to readily access the common working files or something... so far we have not been able to find a tool to access this info easily.... Can anyone make a suggestion? Laurie , Sr Director Rehabiliation Services Beaufort Memorial Hospital From: PTManager [mailto:PTManager ] On Behalf Of M. Howell PT, MPT Sent: Friday, June 01, 2012 6:15 PM To: PTManager Subject: RE: medicare cap Hi Jeff, The answer to your question lies in what services are received in a nursing home setting. Many SNF have an outpatient clinic at the facility or have the ability to bill Medicare Part B outpatient services. This should and can only be done if the resident does not qualify for rehabilitation under Part A. It would be something worth investigating, though. There has to be a medical record of outpatient PT being performed that can be copied if requested for the employee's father, so he and the employee can verify that Part B services were done and recorded. It doesn't matter what setting, as long as it is an allowable Part B charge and an allowable location then it counts towards the cap. Home health service do not count towards the cap HOWEVER, part B services will be denied payment if the person has not been recorded in the system as discharged from home health. An outpatient clinic needs to find out if a Medicare patient has been receiving home health and if they have been discharged at the time they are admitted to/evaluated for outpatient Part B services. That being said, home health agencies also sometimes contract or employ therapists that are Part B eligible and provide Part B services in the home. This may confuse the patient because the same agency that provided home health is now providing outpatient services in the person's home. This is done when the patient no longer qualifies for home health but still needs services in the home. Smart home health agencies have capitalized on this by having therapists that are Part B eligible contracted or on staff. It takes a good and educated office staff to track down online and by the patient what Medicare services the patient/client has actually had prior to starting a new Part B outpatient case to avoid cap problems and denials. If you really have concerns about the cap, use the KX modifier early to make sure that you don't get a denial for going past the cap AND make sure you document why in case you are audited in the future. M.Howell, P.T., M.P.T. IPTA Payment Specialist Meridian, Idaho <mailto:thowell@... <mailto:thowell%40fiberpipe.net> > thowell@... <mailto:thowell%40fiberpipe.net> This email and any files transmitted with it may contain PRIVILEGED or CONFIDENTIAL information and may be read or used only by the intended recipient. If you are not the intended recipient of the email or any of its attachments, please be advised that you have received this email in error and that any use, dissemination, distribution, forwarding, printing or copying of this email or any attached files is strictly prohibited. If you have received this email in error, please immediately purge it and all attachments and notify the sender by reply email. From: PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com> [mailto:PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com> ] On Behalf Of JEFF BROWN Sent: Friday, June 01, 2012 2:41 PM To: PTManager <mailto:PTManager%40yahoogroups.com> Subject: medicare cap I was hoping to get some clarification regarding the hospital outpatient Medicare cap. Specifically will the physical, occupational, and speech pathology services a resident receives while in a nursing home count against the cap allowance? This question was brought to my attention after an employee in our system got a Medicare EOB statement for her father, after his discharge from a nursing home, stating that $800 of the $1880 cap allowance had been utilized by the therapy services provided in the NH. One further question, is it correct that the cap does not apply to Home Health therapy services and therefore would not count against the cap once a patient transitions into outpatient services? Thanks, Jeff Brown PT Director of Rehabilitation Decatur Memorial Hospital 2300 N. St. Decatur, IL 62526 CONFIDENTIAL: This email message and any attachments are for the sole use of the intended recipient(s) and may contain HIGHLY CONFIDENTIAL PERSONAL HEALTH INFORMATION. It is to be used only to aid in providing specific healthcare services to this patient. Any unauthorized review,use, disclosure, or distribution is a violation of Federal Law (HIPAA) and will be reported as such. If you are not the intended recipient or a person responsible for delivering this message to an intended recipient, please contact the sender by reply email and destroy all copies of the original message immediately. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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