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Palliative Care in Hospice: Program Development and Financial Considerations

Learn about the potential benefits of offering palliative care in a hospice setting, conducting a needs assessment, comparing different program models, and identifying financial considerations.

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Palliative Care in Hospice: Program Development and Financial Considerations

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  1. National Hospice and Palliative Care OrganizationPalliative Care Resource SeriesShould our Hospice Provide Palliative Care?Conducting an Organizational AssessmentGretchen Brown, MSWformer President and CEO of Hospice of the Bluegrass

  2. Objectives • Discuss the potential benefits to a hospice offered by a palliative care program • Describe the importance of a needs assessment when considering palliative care services • Compare potential palliative care program models • Identify financial considerations when implementing a palliative care program

  3. Hospice as the Palliative Care Provider • A successful palliative care program depends upon • Sufficient community need • Adequate financial resources • Ample clinical resources and clinical expertise

  4. Hospice- the Ideal Providerof Palliative Care Hospices: • Understand palliative care concepts and interventions • Are experienced at discussing pt/family end-of-life wishes • Can describe advantages and disadvantages of treatments • Are certified and specially trained to care for patients who are appropriate for palliative care • Have experience providing care in a variety of settings

  5. Is Palliative Care Needed in my Community? • Conduct a Needs Assessment/Feasibility Study • Type of palliative care program • Adequate staffing and financial resources • Internal staff discussion of pros and cons • Involve administrative and clinical leaders • Medical director • Financial staff • Representatives from partners or potential partners • Form a planning committee!

  6. Program Development • Develop a list of community programs already offering services • Investigate potential program models • Determine capacity and resources of hospice provider • Examine financial and budget issues required to develop, grow and sustain • Uncover additional helpful resources

  7. Program Development: Community Programs History • Competitors were few when hospices began to offer palliative care • Hospitals provided in acute care setting Today • Palliative care offered by most hospitals • Some hospitals provide palliative home care • Many nursing homes, home health agencies, private physician practices, insurance companies provide palliative care

  8. Program Development: Community Programs Potential patients • PACE programs • Transitions programs • Private or institutional case management programs

  9. Program Development: Community Programs • Evaluate available services • History • Competence • Community reputation • Location • Is there a gap in services? Where?

  10. Program Development: Investigate Program Models • Inpatient acute care model using one to a full range of palliative providers in a hospital setting • Outpatient model providing services in a skilled nursing facility or patients’ homes • Independent clinic or palliative medicine practice

  11. Program Development: Determine Capacity • Identify knowledge deficits • Advanced clinical knowledge of aggressive treatment for diseases • Understanding of operation, regulations and goals of different settings • Home • Hospital • Nursing facility • Long term acute hospital • Challenge of 24 hour on call services

  12. Financial Considerations:Hospices • Palliative care programs – decrease cost of care for medically complex patients • Payment to hospice organization is limited • Medicare Part B and insurance payment • Physicians and nurse practitioners • Other billable physician extenders • Social workers in some outpatient settings • Hospitals, insurers and managed care may have special arrangements

  13. Financial Considerations: Healthcare Systems • Hospices within healthcare systems – easier time funding palliative care program • In system ‘credit’ for cost savings/cost avoidance to overall system can fund new program Examples: • Kaiser – multi-state entity serves as healthcare provider and insurer • Mt. Carmel in Columbus, Ohio • Sharp system in San Diego, California • Sutter in the Bay area • Comprehensive systems in which health system owns the continuum of acute care, home care and hospice

  14. Financial Considerations: Collaborative Models • Health system funds palliative care • Supports large percentage or entire program • Offers subsidies for visits • Collects for billable service or allows hospice to do so (subtracting the billings) • Healthcare system may provide non billable staff or contract from the hospice • Can be effective for acute care, home and clinic models • Can break even! • Example- Hospice of the Bluegrass

  15. Financial Considerations: Fee for Service, Per Diem or Capitated Rate • Partner with large insurance company • Insurance company agrees to pay for service, per diem or capitated rate for home based palliative care • Creative Programs – Hospice of Michigan’s @HOMe • Developed contracts supplying adequate number of patients and payment • System for evaluating the savings generated to health system

  16. Financial Considerations: Fee for Service, Per Diem or Capitated Rate • Medical homes • Contract with hospice organizations to provide palliative care to patients where capitated rates are common. • Stable base for homecare program • Dependable partner – insurer, union, Accountable Care Organization • Income and referral stream

  17. Hospice as the Palliative Care Provider • Most difficult model to sustain • Inpatient programs may breakeven if enough consults • Travel for homecare erodes limited patient billing

  18. Analyzing the Demand and Making the Budget • Knowledge about patients or beneficiaries • Value of cost avoidance • palliative care program reduces costs • prevents inpatient admissions • leads to earlier hospice admissions • Volume of services to estimate income and expenses

  19. Analyzing the Demand and Making the Budget To do’s for the hospice • Obtain Medicare Part B billing number • Billable practitioners need to be credentialed with other payers (Medicare and private insurers) • Payments vary • Setting where service is rendered • Type of service • Type of visit • Duration of visit • Number and type of each visit will need to be estimated

  20. Analyzing the Demand and Making the Budget To Do’s for the Hospice • Calculate difference between cost and income • Initially bottom line will be negative! • Determine if deficit will be offset by • Service differentiation • Partnership or customer development • Potential for additional patients • Potential for increased length of stay

  21. Other Considerations Pilot programs • Help determine potential success of new program • Inpatient program – one service or one floor in a facility for specified time • Home based program – 20 referrals from hospital or insurer • Help staff understand strengths and weaknesses • Reveal unexpected challenges and opportunities

  22. Other Considerations State and federal regulations • Impact how program is organized and implemented • Legal advice from healthcare attorney early in planning process • Hospice can benefit from partner’s legal counsel – should also have its own

  23. Other Considerations Additional resources • Philanthropic support for startup and ongoing • Family • Healthcare systems • Community foundations • Educational resources • Hired consultant

  24. Conclusion • Hospice organizations are ideal palliative care providers and partners • Education and planning are key to deciding to provide palliative care • Only if quality services can be provided at a cost that does not negatively affect the hospice!

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