R414-14A-14. Provider Initiated Discharge from Hospice Care  


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  • (1) The hospice provider may not initiate discharge of a patient from hospice care except in the following circumstances:

    (a) the patient moves out of the hospice provider's geographic service area or transfers to another hospice provider by choice;

    (b) the hospice determines that the patient is no longer terminally ill; or

    (c) the hospice provider determines, under a policy set by the hospice for the purpose of addressing discharge for cause, that the patient's behavior (or the behavior of other persons in the patient's home) is disruptive, abusive, or uncooperative to the extent that delivery of care to the patient or the ability of the hospice to operate effectively is seriously impaired.

    (2) The hospice provider must carry out the following activities before it seeks to discharge a patient for cause:

    (a) advise the patient that a discharge for cause is being considered;

    (b) make a diligent effort to resolve the problem that the patient's behavior or situation presents;

    (c) ascertain that the discharge is not due to the patient's use of necessary hospice services; and

    (d) document the problem and efforts to resolve the problem in the patient's medical record.

    (3) Before discharging a patient for any reason listed in Subsection R414-14A-14(1), the hospice provider must obtain a physician's written discharge order from the hospice provider's medical director. If a patient also has an attending physician, the hospice provider must consult the physician before discharge and the attending physician must include the review and decision in the discharge documentation.

    (4) A client, upon discharge from the hospice during a particular election period, for reasons other than immediate transfer to another hospice:

    (a) is no longer covered under Medicaid for hospice care;

    (b) resumes Medicaid coverage of the benefits waived during the hospice coverage period; (for adult clients); and

    (c) may at any time elect to receive hospice care if the client is again eligible to receive the benefit in the future.

    (5) The hospice provider must have in place a discharge planning process that takes into account the prospect that a patient's condition might stabilize or otherwise change if that patient cannot continue to be certified as terminally ill. The discharge planning process must include planning for any necessary family counseling, patient education, or other services before the patient is discharged because the patient is no longer terminally ill.