If a patient meets the four following conditions, Medicare will help pay for care in a hospital:
- Inpatient hospital care has been prescribed by a physician for treatment of an illness or injury,
- The patient requires the kind of care that can only be provided in a hospital,
- The hospital is participating in Medicare, and
- The stay is not disapproved by the hospital’s utilization review or peer review committee.
Medicare Part A Benefits
Medicare Part A will provide:
Inpatient hospital care for up to 90 days in each benefit period.
- A Medicare beneficiary is entitled to inpatient hospital care for up to 90 days in each “benefit period.”
- A “benefit period” begins the day a patient is admitted to a hospital. It ends when the patient has been in neither a hospital nor a facility primarily furnishing skilled nursing or rehabilitative services for 60 straight days.
- There is no limit on the number of 90-day benefit periods a person can have in his or her lifetime (except in the case of hospitalization for mental illness).
- If the patient is hospitalized for more than 90 days, he or she can use up to 60 lifetime reserve days.
- Once these reserve days are used up, the patient (or the patient’s insurer) must pay for any additional hospital care.
- The patient’s lifetime reserve is not renewable.
A deductible is paid by the patient for the first 60 days, then the patient pays coinsurance of a specific dollar amount per day for any additional days up to 30 days.
- There is no coinsurance for the first 60 days of hospitalization in a spell of illness.
- There is a higher coinsurance for the lifetime reserve days. In 2006, this amount was $476 per day, up from $380 per day in 1997.
Extended post-hospital care in a skilled nursing facility for up to 100 days in each benefit period.
- The patient pays nothing for the first 20 days.
- The patient pays coinsurance of a specific dollar amount per day for any additional days up to a maximum of 80 days.
- The facility cannot be for custodial care only.
- Nursing care must be provided under the supervision of licensed physicians and registered nurses.
Unlimited post-hospital home health services as long as they are made under the orders of a physician. The patient pays 20% of the cost for any durable medical equipment.
Hospice care for terminally ill patients. The only cost to the patient is a 5% copayment for prescriptions and respite care.
Originally, Medicare payments were made to the hospital or nursing home on a “cost-plus” basis. The facilities were guaranteed a certain profit above their costs of providing the care. This was an expensive payment system that discouraged thrift because the more that the facilities spent, the more profit they made.
Beginning in 1983, a new payment system was instituted called the
Diagnosis Related Group (DRG). Hospitals were subsequently paid a flat fee for each Medicare patient based on the initial diagnosis of illness. The DRG system is supposed to encourage thrift since the hospital makes more money if it can cure the patient and discharge him or her faster. Some critics feel, however, that this new system now provides the hospitals with an incentive to undertreat the patient.
However, this incentive is mitigated by federal laws against “dumping” patients and by a requirement that all Medicare patients are entitled to “discharge planning.” Hospitals must notify patients that they have a right to a written discharge plan that informs them about health resources appropriate for their needs, such as nursing homes and home care. Moreover, if a patient believes that the discharge was premature, an appeal to Social Security is available.
In addition, the private insurance market has now developed capitation insurance which provides coverage for the additional costs incurred by the hospital for patients needing care above the flat rate provided by Medicare.