Medicare recipients who fail to clarify their hospital
status can pay a high price.
Chris Kissell • February 5, 2020
Are you a Medicare
enrollee? If so, ask this question the next time you visit a hospital for care:
“Am I admitted, or am I here for observation?”
Failing to do so could
potentially cost you thousands of dollars.
That’s because if the
hospital deems that you are at the facility “for observation” — also referred
to as you being an “outpatient” — Medicare will not pick up the
tab for certain hospital services. Nor would Medicare pay for
care you receive in a skilled nursing facility if you need to go to such a
facility after leaving the hospital.
To get Medicare coverage
for hospital services like X-rays and lab tests, or for care in a skilled
nursing facility, you first need to be “admitted” to a hospital. This is also
referred to as you being an “inpatient.”
Margie Barrie, an
insurance agent with ACSIA Partners, knows the potential danger of making the
wrong move. She recently wrote a piece for
ThinkAdvisor about the day her 98-year-old mother was taken to
an emergency room with what turned out to be congestive heart failure.
Eventually, Barrie’s
mother was told she was being moved to a hospital room. Barrie recounted how a
hospital employee approached Barrie’s mother with several papers to sign,
saying the forms were routine:
“The first paper is about
authorizing Medicare to pay the hospital bill.
The second paper — and
this is done very smoothly — states that my mother understands she will be in
the hospital on observation status for 24 hours.
As my mother is handed
the paper to sign, I shout, ‘Mom, don’t sign it!'”
Barrie says various
members of the hospital staff tried to browbeat her mother into signing the
forms — at least until Barrie uttered some magic words: “I write a column in a
national newsletter that has a large circulation.”
After a bit more debate
and discussion about whether Barrie’s mother had been given oxygen in the ER —
she had been — her mother’s hospital status was changed from “observation” to
“admitted.”
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As it turns out, Barrie’s
mother did end up going to a skilled nursing facility for physical therapy and
rehabilitation after leaving the hospital. Had Barrie not pushed to get her
mother’s hospital status changed while her mother was at the hospital, the stay
in the nursing facility would have cost $650 a day — out of pocket.
Barrie’s parting words of
advice to others who find themselves — or loved ones — in a similar situation
are as follows:
“Know these rules so that
you can challenge them if appropriate. This discussion must occur in the
emergency room. The reason is that when the patient leaves the emergency room,
you cannot get the status changed.”
To learn more about the
rules that determine whether someone’s Medicare hospital status is observation
or outpatient versus admission or inpatient, you might want to start by
reviewing Medicare’s “Are You a Hospital
Inpatient or Outpatient?” handout.
Looking for more ways to
save on Medicare costs? Knowledge is power! So, check out Money Talks
News’ latest Medicare
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https://www.moneytalksnews.com/simple-steps-for-a-more-comfortable-retirement/
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