|
Jimmo Corrective
Action Plan Completed
CMS Adds
Resources Regarding Medicare Coverage
To Help People Who Need
Skilled Maintenance Nursing or Therapy
For Immediate Release
August 28, 2017
As ordered by the federal
judge in Jimmo v. Sebelius,
the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) published a new
webpage containing important information about the Jimmo Settlement on its
CMS.gov website. The Jimmo
webpage is the final step in a court-ordered Corrective Action Plan, designed
to reinforce the fact that Medicare
does cover skilled nursing and skilled therapy services needed to
maintain a patient’s function or to prevent or slow decline. Improvement or
progress is not necessary as long as skilled
care is required. The Jimmo
standards apply to home health care, nursing home care, outpatient therapies,
and, to a certain extent, for care in Inpatient Rehabilitation
Facilities/Hospitals.
The Jimmo webpage and other
elements of the Correction Action Plan should help ensure that the Jimmo Settlement is
implemented correctly and that it opens doors to Medicare coverage and
necessary care for beneficiaries who require maintenance care, including
people with long-term, progressive, or debilitating conditions. As required
by the Court, CMS also provided additional training for Medicare
decision-makers.
Judith A. Stein, Executive
Director of the Center for Medicare Advocacy, which is lead counsel for the
nationwide class of Medicare beneficiaries said, “People living with MS, Parkinson’s
Alzheimer’s, paralysis and other long-term conditions have waited long enough
for this relief. We hope that the new CMS education and information, which
can be found at CMS.gov and printed out with the CMS logo, will help convince
providers that Medicare really is available for people who need this critical
maintenance care.”
“After years of fighting over
this standard in court, we are hopeful that Medicare has finally acknowledged
that beneficiaries with long-standing and chronic problems are entitled to
maintenance skilled care to prevent or slow decline in their overall
condition,” said Michael Benvenuto, of Vermont Legal Aid, co-counsel for the Jimmo plaintiffs.
The new webpage contains an “Important Message About the Jimmo
Settlement,” in which court-approved language emphasizes that the
Settlement “may reflect a change in practice” for providers and
Medicare decision-makers who erroneously believed that the Medicare program
covers nursing and therapy services only when a beneficiary is expected to
improve. Indeed, the new education and Jimmo webpage are important because many
health care providers still operate under this misconception, leading
beneficiaries to be wrongly denied needed services such as physical and
occupational therapy.
This was the case, for
example, for Mrs. B, who was denied necessary on-going physical therapy,
needed to maintain her condition after spinal surgery. While she had begun to
walk again independently after nursing home care, and out-patient PT, when
the PT ended because it was “maintenance only,” Mrs. B declined and was no
longer able to ambulate independently.
One of the “Frequently Asked
Questions” posted on the Jimmo
CMS.gov page clarifies that this should not happen: “The Medicare program
does not require a patient to decline before covering medically necessary
skilled nursing or skilled therapy.”
The Jimmo webpage contains
fifteen such “Frequently Asked Questions,” which dispel other mistaken
beliefs. One answer, confirms: “Skilled services would be covered where
such skilled services are necessary to maintain the patient’s current
condition or prevent or slow further deterioration so long as the beneficiary
requires skilled care to the services to be safely and effectively provided.”
Judge Christina Reiss of the
U.S. District Court in Vermont ordered
the corrective action plan in February 2017 after finding that CMS was in
breach of the original
Jimmo settlement agreement, which was
reached in 2013. In addition to the webpage, the Corrective Action Plan
required CMS to offer additional training about coverage for skilled
maintenance care for Medicare’s contractors and adjudicators who decide
whether coverage will be granted.
Under the original Jimmo Settlement, CMS
revised several chapters of its policy manuals (including those for Skilled
Nursing Facility, Home Health, Out Therapy and Inpatient Rehabilitation
Facility.) CMS also held an educational campaign to clarify that improvement
is not required for coverage of skilled care. Lawyers for the Jimmo plaintiff class
requested further action from the court when it became clear that too many
people were still being wrongfully denied Medicare coverage – in part because
many medical providers had not been adequately educated, and in part because
many providers were still skeptical that Medicare would alter its coverage
practices. The new webpage offers CMS’s official imprimatur on the correct
legal standard that improvement is not required when there is a need
for skilled care.
For more information
about Medicare coverage for maintenance care and CMS’s new Jimmo webpage, register
for the Center for Medicare Advocacy’s free webinar, to be held September
27, 2017 at 3:00pm EDT/12pm PDT.
Contact:
Matthew Shepard, Communications Director
MShepard@MedicareAdvocacy.org,
(860) 456-7790
View as webpage:
http://www.medicareadvocacy.org/jimmo-corrective-action-plan-completed
###
The Center for
Medicare Advocacy, Inc.,
established in 1986, is a national nonprofit, nonpartisan law organization
that provides education, advocacy and legal assistance to help older people
and people with disabilities obtain fair access to Medicare and quality
health care. The Center is headquartered in Washington, DC and Connecticut,
with attorneys throughout the country.
|
|
No comments:
Post a Comment