• J Palliat Med · Dec 2017

    Hospice Visit Patterns in the Last Seven Days of Life and the Service Intensity Add-On Payment.

    • Pedro L Gozalo, Joan M Teno, and Carol Spence.
    • 1 Department of Health Services, Policy, and Practice, Brown University School of Public Health , Providence, Rhode Island.
    • J Palliat Med. 2017 Dec 1; 20 (12): 1378-1384.

    BackgroundHospice in-person visits in the last week of life are critical to ensure quality of care. In 2016, The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) introduced a Service Intensity Add-on (SIA) payment for in-person routine home care (RHC) visits by a registered nurse or social worker in the last 7 days of life.ObjectivesThe aim of the study was to examine visit patterns in the last week of life and provide SIA payment impact estimates.Design/MeasurementsHospice data from 42 volunteer hospice programs for the 6-year period of 2005-2010 were examined. The data included information on the type and duration of visits/other care, the staff discipline, and patient demographics, diagnoses, date of death, and care setting (home, assisted living, nursing home).ResultsIn their last week of life, 251,407 decedents received 2,818,695 visits during 1,352,638 RHC days. Forty-four percent of the decedents had at least one SIA-eligible visit (in-person direct care visit by a registered nurse (RN) or social worker (SW)); 6.6% had only phone contact, and 30.4% had no hospice contact. Rates of RHC days with SIA-eligible days varied considerably across hospices (31% to 60.9%). For the 86.3% decedents with any SIA-eligible visits, average SIA payment would have been $202.5 (Median = $177.2, inter quartile range [IQR] = $108.3-$275.6), which represents a 21.6% increase over the average regular RHC payments received during the last week of life.ConclusionsThe relative size of the new SIA payment introduced by CMS has the potential to increase RN/SW visits and reduce disparities in visit patterns in the last week of life.

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