Financing Custodial Care
Select:
Custodial care is a term for care provided to patients on an on-going maintenance basis. The majority of care in nursing homes is custodial. The nursing home charges a basic rate to cover room and board. Therapies and medicines are charged in addition to the basic rate. Monthly amounts for custodial care range from $3500 to $6,000 per month.
Medicare
Medicare does not cover custodial care.

Medicaid
Medicaid is the principal source of reimbursement for custodial nursing home care. It is a program for the poor. Therefore, recipients must meet the means test for Medicaid eligibility.

Commercial Insurers
Commercial insurance plans pay for custodial care under the terms of plans purchased by individuals. These plans, sometimes called long-term care plans, are increasingly available and usually pay a daily rate ($100-$300).

Managed Care
Custodial care is not usually covered under most managed care health plans. However, a growing number of people purchase long-term care insurance.

Government (Veterans Affairs, Active Duty Military)
The active duty military personnel who need custodial care are discharged from active duty. Custodial care is provided by the Department of Veterans affairs for eligible veterans. Service-connected disability is always covered. Otherwise, eligible veterans are means-tested before eligibility is determined. The VA has its own nursing homes. In addition, some veterans have their custodial care paid for under contracts.
Next, consider the financing of ambulatory outpatient care.
CAPC Resources:
Additional resources on "Financing US Healthcare"
CAPC Resources:
Additional resources on "Financing US Healthcare"
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CAPCManual Attribution:
von Gunten CF,
Ferris FD,
Portenoy RK,
Glajchen M, eds.
CAPCManual: How to Establish A Palliative Care Program.
New York, NY: Center to Advance Palliative Care, 2001.
©
Center for Palliative Studies, San Diego Hospice & Palliative Care, San Diego, CA
and
The Department of Pain Medicine and Palliative Care, Beth Israel Medical Center, New York, NY, 2001
Permission to reproduce for non-commercial educational purposes with display of
attribution and
copyright is granted.
Last updated: February 20, 2002
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Elements
Select section:
Basis, Context, Components,
Case Examples
Basis of Palliative Care Practice
Palliative Care Definitions
Historical Definitions
WHO
Oxford Textbook
ABHPM
NHPCO
Palliative Care
Applicability
Application to Patients at Risk
Differences–Hospice & Palliative Care
Values, Ethical Principles
Values
Ethical Principles
Conceptual Framework
Square of Care
Square of Organization
Square of Care & Organization
Norms / Standards of Practice
Guidelines
Policies, Procedures
What are They?
Developing, Implementing, Evaluating
Measures
Definitions of Common Terms

Context
Tensions
In Therapeutic Relationships
Within Host Organizations
Within Healthcare System, Community
Who's the Customer
US Healthcare
Acute Care Hospitals
Long-term Care Facilities
Home
Hospice Care
Financing US Healthcare
Expenditures for EOL Care
Overview by Settings, Revenue Sources
Medicare
Medicaid
Commercial Insurers
Managed Care
Government (VA, Military)
Financing
Community Hospitals
Academic Hospitals
Subacute, Skilled Care
Custodial Care
Ambulatory Care
Home Care
Hospice Care
Eligibility
Covered Services
Reimbursement Rates
Unintended Consequences
Financing Physicians
Coding
Procedure / Service Codes
Coding Based on Time
Frequently Used E/M Codes
Example
Addition of Procedure Codes
Diagnosis Codes
ICD-9 Codes for Palliative Care
Avoiding Concurrent Billing Problems
Example
Documentation
Example
Physician Reimbursement
Medicare
Medicare Hospice Benefit
Non-hospice Physicians
Associated with a Hospice
Medicaid
Commercial Insurers
Managed Care
Government (VA, Military)
Financing Non-physician Providers
Hospital–Hospice Relationships

Program Components
1º, 2º, 3º Model of Palliative Care Delivery
Interdisciplinary Care
Members of Interdisciplinary Team
Core Competencies
Physician
Nurse
Social Worker
Chaplain
Volunteer
Specialized Environments
Types of Services
Consultation Services
Consultation Etiquette
Consultation Documentation
Sample Note
Inpatient Units
Developing an Inpatient Unit
Staffing
Acuity
Nursing Model
Unit Size
General Ward vs. Palliative Care Unit
Roles
Decisions
Case Example
Nursing Staff
Physician Staff
Other Staff
Advice
Home Care
Eligibility, Medicare Home Health Benefit
Covered Services
Usually Not Covered
Hospice Care at Home
Ambulatory Outpatient Care
Respite Care
Financing Palliative Care Programs
Acute Hospital
Skilled Care Nursing Home
Hospice
Home Health
Ambulatory Outpatient
Managed Care
Financing Physicians in Palliative Care
Financing Non-physicians in Palliative Care

Case Examples
CAPCManual Case Examples
Pioneer Program Case Examples
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