While understanding and acceptance of the Medicare Hospice Benefit has grown in recent years, there are still knowledge gaps about the higher levels of hospice care that Medicare allows eligible beneficiaries to receive.
One of the higher levels of hospice that Medicare covers is General Inpatient (GIP) care. GIP is useful for circumstances where a patient needs “…pain control or acute or chronic symptom management, which can’t be managed in other settings.”
If patients are experiencing pain or other symptoms that meet Medicare’s requirements, and those symptoms cannot be controlled in the place they consider to be their home, GIP may be a clinically appropriate option for them on a short-term basis.
GIP provides 24/7 nursing and aide care, as well as access to other members of the hospice interdisciplinary team. Complex regimens and treatments needed for the control of symptoms can be provided to patients, such as compassionate extubations, advanced pain management via IV drips, or complex wound managements, among others.
GIP allows hospice professionals to work to control these symptoms in either a freestanding hospice inpatient center, a hospital-based hospice inpatient center, a skilled nursing facility under contract, or a hospital bed under contract. It provides a path for eligible dying patients a way to receive highly skilled and comforting care at one of the most vulnerable points in their life.
Use of hospice GIP for eligible patients can also help healthcare professionals along the continuum of care by easing transitions, allowing patients to stay closer to where they consider to be home, avoiding rehospitalizations, lowering costs, and honoring patient wishes.
Medicare doesn’t intend for General Inpatient Hospice to be used for custodial or long-term care, but rather to bring symptoms under control that can’t be managed in another setting. Discharge planning to a lower level of hospice care begins almost immediately upon enrollment, and most patients stay on GIP for hours to a few days. However, in times of crisis where a patient may unexpectedly find themselves in extreme pain or with complex medical needs, it is a critical component of how we support the dying by alleviating symptoms and providing smoother transitions.
As healthcare professionals seek to achieve better quality outcomes at lower costs to be good stewards of Medicare and Medicaid dollars, knowing when and how to partner with a hospice to provide GIP should be a critical component of their population health strategies.