Palliative Care Definition
care meant to improve QOL who have a serious or life-threatening disease
approach to care that addresses the person as a whole, not just their disease
goal is to prevent, treat the s/s and side effects of disease and its treatment in addition to any psychosocial problems
anyone can receive regardless of age or stage
Three roles of palliative care team
How many people prefer to die at home?
70%
How many people die at an hospital?
76%
they receive more aggressive, invasive, poorer quality care than they would ad home
Hospice Care
Palliative Care overview
Durable power of attorney for health care
lets the pt name one of more people to serve as health care agent or proxy, giving them power to make medical decisions on behalf of pt
Living Will
lets pt specify what type of care or treatments they wish to receive and list the circumstances in which they’d like them to be used
If you do not have an AD
Situations in which an AD would not be followed
POLST/MOLST
AD overview
POLST Overview
Medicare part A
Medicare Part B
Medicare Part C
Shared Risk Model
part of medicare part c
plan manages a group of lives and are paid per life managed
What % of Medicare Advantage have United Healthcare or Humana
47
Medicare Part D
CPT vs ICD-10 Codes
CPT: identify services rendered
ICD: represents pt diagnosis
Resident Assessment Instrument (RAI)
determines quality of life for patients in nursing homes or facilities
OASIS Manual
patient-specific, standardized assessment used in Medicare home health care to plan care, determine reimbursement, and measure quality
Three Guiding Principles for Documentation
Medical Necessity
Skilled Service
Reasonable and Necessary
Medical Necessity