Source: https://www.medicareadvocacy.org/beneficiary-protections-expanded-in-revised-home-health-conditions-of-participation/
Timestamp: 2019-04-22 14:16:52+00:00

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This is Part Six of a ten-part CMA Issue Brief Series examining the growing crisis in access to Medicare home health coverage and necessary care – and outlining the Center for Medicare Advocacy’s work to address these issues. We invite you to follow this Issue Brief Series and submit Medicare home health stories to the Center at https://www.medicareadvocacy.org/submit-your-home-health-access-story/.
2018 ushers in newly revised Conditions of Participation (COP) that must be met in order for home health agencies to participate in Medicare. Effective January 13, 2018, beneficiary protections will be expanded under the COP which provide a more patient-centered focus of care. The revised regulations include: A new patient bill of rights that must be clear and accessible to patients and staff; additional patient assessment requirements to include psychosocial, functional and cognitive components; more significant consideration of patient preferences; greater patient involvement in care planning; coordination and integration with all of a patient’s physicians; inclusion of patients, their representatives, and home health aides on the interdisciplinary care team; and, very significantly, greater protections for patients from arbitrary transfer or discharge from home health care.
§484.2 A Patient-Selected Representative is newly defined as someone chosen by the patient to participate in making decisions related to the patient’s care or well-being, including family members or advocates, despite the fact that they may not have any legal standing. Legal Representatives continue to be someone who is acting on the legal authority to make health care decisions.
§§484.50 – 484.50(a)(1)(iii) The patient and patient’s legal representative (if any) have the right to be informed of the patient rights in a language and manner the individual understands. This must include the home health agency’s policies regarding transfers and discharge from care.
§484.50(a)(3) The home health agency must provide at least verbal notice of patient rights no later than the completion of the second visit from a skilled professional.
§484.50(a)(4) This section requires: (1) written notice of patient rights and discharge or transfer policies be given to a patient-selected representative within 4 business days after an initial evaluation visit; (2) the home health agency to inquire about patient preferences and demonstrate progress toward goals; and (3) the home health agency to identify family caregivers and their willingness and availability to assist with care.
§484.50(c)(4)(i) Patients have a right to participate in and be informed about all assessments (the previous Conditions of Participation only extended the patient right to be involved in the initial comprehensive assessment).
§484.50(c)(4) Patients have the right to participate in, be informed about, and consent or refuse care in advance of and during treatment.
§484.50(c)(5) Patients have the right to receive all the services outlined in the plan of care.
§484.50(d)(1) Importantly, this section creates a new standard addressing transfer and discharge of patients by a home health agency. In this section, home health agencies are responsible for making arrangements for any safe and appropriate transfer of a patient to another agency.
§484.50(d)(3) Discharge is noted to be appropriate only when a physician and home health agency both agree that the patient has achieved measureable outcomes and goals established in the individual plan of care. Remember that goals may include slowing deterioration of a condition, maintaining a condition, or improving a condition.
§484.50(e)(1)(i) The subject matter upon which patients may make complaints about a home health agency is not limited just to subjects specified in the regulations.
§484.50(e)(1)(iii) Home health agencies must take action to prevent retaliation against a patient while a patient complaint is investigated.
§484.55(c)(1) The comprehensive assessment must assess or identify current health status. A new requirement has been added to include assessment of psychosocial, functional, and cognitive status.
§484.55(c)(2) The comprehensive assessment must include patient’s strengths, goals and care preferences, including, but not limited to, patient’s progress toward achievement of goals identified by the patient and measureable goal outcomes identified by the home health agency.
§484.55(c)(6) The comprehensive assessment must identify the patient’s primary caregivers (if any) and any other actually available support.
§484.55(c)(6)(i) The comprehensive assessment must include information about caregivers’ willingness and ability to provide care, their availability, and schedules.
This section requires patients and caregivers to receive education and training including written instructions outlining medication schedules and instructions, home health personnel visit schedules, and other pertinent instructions related to patient care and treatment that the home health agency will provide specific to patient care needs.
§484.60(b)(1) Expands services, treatments and medications that can be ordered by any of the patient’s physicians, not only the physician or physicians responsible for the plan of care.
§484.60(b)(4) Permits any nurse acting in accord with state licensure requirements to verbally receive physician orders.
§484.60(d)(1) and (2) Home health agencies must assure communication with all physicians involved in the plan of care, not just the physician that signed the plan of care, and the home health agency must integrate orders from all physicians to ensure appropriate coordination of services and interventions.
This section sets out standards and required quality and improvement measures for home health agencies that are detailed, monitored and documented.
§484.75(b)(7) A home health agency must communicate with all physicians involved in the plan of care and accept orders directly from multiple physicians involved in the plan of care, even if they are not in the same practice group.
§484.80(g)(1) Removes a previous requirement that the skilled professional who is responsible for the supervision of a home health aide must be the same individual who prepares written patient care instructions for the home health aide.
§484.80(g)(2) Requires home health agencies to provide services ordered by the physician in the plan of care as long as the home health agency is permitted to perform the services under state law and the services are consistent with training received by the home health aide to provide the services.
§484.80(g)(3) Home health aides duties are defined to include: Provision of hands on personal care; performance of simple procedures as an extension of therapy or nursing services; assistance in ambulation or exercises; and assistance in administering medications ordinarily self-administered.
§484.80(g)(4) Requires that home health aides be members of the interdisciplinary team; report changes in a patient’s condition; and, complete appropriate records in compliance with home health agency policies and procedures.
§484.80(h)(1) Requires a home health supervisor (RN or therapist) to make an onsite visit to the patient’s home no less frequently than every 14 days. The home health aide would not have to be present at the time of the onsite visit.
§484.80(h)(4) Requires a supervisor to ensure the care provided by the home health aide is safe and effective, including, but not limited to: following the plan of care; maintaining open communication with the patient, representatives, caregivers and family; demonstrating competency with assigned tasks; complying with infection prevention and control policies and procedures; reporting changes in the patient’s condition; and, honoring patient rights.
§484.105(c) This section was revised to specify that one or more qualified individuals must provide oversight of all patient care services and personnel.
§484.110(e) A patient’s clinical records must be made readily available to a patient or appropriately authorized individual upon request.
The practical impact of the new Conditions of Participation is yet to be seen. They should, however, provide welcome additional tools to ensure Medicare-covered home health care is properly provided and that patient rights are respected.
 CMS issued a Press release on January 9, 2017 stating that the revised Conditions of Participation “are the minimum health and safety standards a home health agency must meet in order to participate in the Medicare and Medicaid programs.” (CMS Press Release, CMS Finalizes New Medicare and Medicaid Home Health Care Rules and Beneficiary Protections, 1/9/2019).
 The revised conditions of participation rules were originally expected to be effective July 13, 2017. https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2017-01-13/pdf/2017-00283.pdf. Due to a six-month delay in the effective date, https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2017-07-10/pdf/2017-14347.pdf, the new effective date for the revised rules is January 13, 2018.

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