A Quiet ‘Sea Change’ in Medicare
Ever since Cindy Hasz opened her geriatric care management business in San Diego 13 years ago, she has been fighting a losing battle for clients unable to get Medicare coverage for physical therapy because they plateaued and were not getting better.
It has been standard operating procedure that patients will be discontinued from therapy services because they are not improving, she said.
No more. In January, Medicare officials updated the agencys policy manual the rule book for everything Medicare does to erase any notion that improvement is necessary to receive coverage for skilled care. That means Medicare now will pay for physical therapy, nursing care and other services for beneficiaries with chronic diseases like multiple sclerosis, Parkinsons or Alzheimers disease in order to maintain their condition and prevent deterioration.
But dont look for an announcement about the changes in the mail, or even a prominent notice on the Medicare website. Medicare officials were required to inform health care providers, bill processors, auditors, Medicare Advantage plans, the 800-MEDICARE information line and appeals judges but not beneficiaries.
http://newoldage.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/03/25/a-quiet-sea-change-in-medicare/?hp