Supporting Family Caregivers

Many of our hardest-working caregivers are not professionals, but parents, spouses, and children of people with serious chronic conditions, limited in their ability to engage in activities of daily living (ADLs) or instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs).  A new report from the National Alliance for Caregiving and the AARP opens up this informal, but absolutely essential, world of unpaid caregiving (h/t: Howard Gleckman ).

Some basic facts on the caregivers:

  • They’re usually (66%) women;
  • On average, they provide over 20 hours of care each week;
  • They’re of all income levels, with an average income of about $60,000
  • About one-third care for more than one person.

Some basic facts about those receiving the care:

  • They’re mostly over 50 years of age, and 44% are over the age of 75;
  • Most (51%) live in their own homes;
  • Most (69%) require care due to long-term physical condition;
  • 34% receive informal caregiving for 5 years or more.

elderly-womanIn many cases, informal caregivers enable people with significant care needs to avoid nursing home or other institutional care.  Patients are better off, and so is the health budget: the avoided costs of expensive hospitalizations and nursing home care are enormous.   I have previously described the reform bills’ provisions that would support in-place care for people with chronic illness and disabilities.  Medicaid amendments would expand home care services, including such Cash & Counseling programs that give consumers substantial control over the mix of home services, and permit support for kinship caregiving.  And the Senate bill incorporates the Community Living Assistance Services and Supports Act (the “CLASS Act”), which provides for a new source of funding for personal assistance services for those not Medicaid-eligible.  A move supported by the insurance industry to strip it from the reform bill was narrowly defeated on December 4th.

The insurance industry, of course, is vigorously trying to protect its own nascent long term care insurance business.  The long term care insurance industry has faced its share of horror stories about bureaucratic double-talk, denied claims, high prices, and limited benefits. The CLASS Act would provide an optional source of coverage, creating a voluntary program of member-supported public insurance for home care costs.  Like Medicaid’s Cash & Counseling system, it provides consumers with flexibility to choose the mix of supportive care when his or her health status triggers eligibility for coverage.

Why do we need such a program?  After all, there are many willing attorneys ready to help people spend down their assets — achieving “Medicaid impoverishment” — in order to qualify for Medicaid’s richer coverage.  Georgetown scholar Judy Feder was asked just that question for a recent Time Magazine article on the CLASS Act.  Her response was dead-on:

“Medicaid is invaluable,” says Judy Feder, a health policy expert at Georgetown University and a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress. “But it’s not insurance. It doesn’t protect you from catastrophe. It takes care of you after catastrophe.”

The long-term care financing mix in the Senate bill is far from perfect.  As a panel of experts surveyed by the Commonwealth Fund overwhelmingly agreed last year, the best solution would be to add a premium-financed long-term care component to Medicare, allowing the cost to be shared by government and consumers, without the trouble or expense of creating a new programmatic structure.  In the alternative, Congress could cobble together a better integrated “system” of long term/home care financing.  Such a system could virtually integrate a long-term care financing continuum, including Medicaid, Medicare, and voluntary insurance (such as that created by the CLASS Act) that could support consumers with chronic illness in the most appropriate setting for supportive care, reducing the discontinuities in coverage, perverse incentives for institutionalization, and counterproductive limits on services.  Either actual integration of all long term care services in Medicare, or the virtual integration (through smooth eligibility and service interfaces) in Medicare, Medicaid, and CLASS Act coverage could improve care and reduce costs.  But that won’t happen this year.

Instead, the best hope for expansion of access to personal assistance services will be the strengthening of Medicaid’s home care provisions and the creation of the CLASS Act program.  The overwhelming reform focus has been on very traditional “medical” insurance run through private, risk bearing insurance companies.  Only at the margins will the reform address the growing need for financing  appropriate health care for chronic illness.  Keeping the CLASS Act is a small step, but it at least acknowledges the obligation to support the personal assistance needs of those with serious chronic illnesses or disabilities, who are not (yet) impoverished, and who prefer to remain in their communities.  The CLASS Act will provide a new funding source for patient-directed personal assistance services.   Family caregivers will continue to devote themselves to their loved ones, but they need help.

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Home Health Area Especially Vulnerable To Medicare Fraud And Abuse

March 27, 2009 by Justin Goldstein · Leave a Comment
Filed under: CMS, Medicare 

Photo by consumerfriendly via Flickr

Photo by consumerfriendly via Flickr

American Health Lawyers Association reports that the increased amount of federal spending on home health benefits has led to the rise of fraud and abuse issues.  AHLA reports that federal “spending on home health grew approximately 44% from 2002 through 2006 ….”

AHLA states:

Gaps in the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ (CMS’) administration of the $12.9 billion Medicare home health benefit have left the program vulnerable to improper payments, including payments for claims resulting from fraudulent and abusive practices, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) found in a recent report.

The opportunities for fraud and abuse issues concerning home health care are manifold.  AHLA states that  the “common types of upcoding and billing for unnecessary care in home health were: billing for outlier cases when that level of care was not required, billing for beneficiaries who were not homebound, and billing for therapy visits that may have been medically unnecessary. ”

The Department of Justice defines upcoding as “the practice of improperly assigning a diagnosis code to a patient discharge that is not supported by the medical record for the purpose of obtaining a higher level of reimbursement for that hospital discharge than the hospital would otherwise receive.”

AHLA also reports that Home Health Agencies (HHAs) “are not routinely subject to revalidation and that CMS generally does not include physicians, who are in a position to detect certain types of improper billing, in the agency’s efforts to detect improper payments.”

AHLA reports that CMS is considering adopting two of the four actions recommended by GAO:

CMS stated that it would consider two of GAO’s four recommendations–to amend regulations to expand the types of improper billing practices that are grounds for revocation of billing privileges and to provide physicians who certify or recertify plans of care with a statement of services received by beneficiaries. The agency “neither agreed nor disagreed with our other two recommendations,” GAO explained.

AHLA reports that the four recommendations for CMS are:

  • Assess the feasibility of verifying the criminal history of all key officials named on an HHA enrollment application.
  • Provide physicians whose identification number was used to certify or recertify a plan of care with a statement of services the HHA provided to that beneficiary based on the physician’s certification.
  • Direct CMS contractors to conduct post-payment medical reviews on claims submitted by HHAs with high rates of improper billing identified through prepayment review.
  • Amend current regulations to expand the types of improper billing practices that are grounds for revocation of billing privileges.

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