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Note: Certain cancers with poor prognoses (e.g., small cell lung cancer, brain cancer and pancreatic cancer) may be hospice eligible without fulfilling the other criteria in this section.
Patients are considered eligible for Hospice care if they do not elect tracheostomy and invasive ventilation and display evidence of critically impaired respiratory function (with or without use of NIPPV) and / or severe nutritional insufficiency (with or without use of a gastrostomy tube).
Patients will be considered to be in the terminal stage of dementia (life expectancy of six months or less) if they meet the following criteria.
1. Patients with dementia should show all the following characteristics:
2. Patients should have had one of the following within the past 12 months:
Note: This section is specific for Alzheimer’s disease and Related Disorders, and is not appropriate for other types of dementia.
Patients will be considered to be in the terminal stage of heart disease (life expectancy of six months or less) if they meet the following criteria. (1 and 2 should be present. Factors from 3 will add supporting documentation.)
Patients will be considered to be in the terminal stage of their illness (life expectancy of six months or less) if they meet the following criteria. (1 and 2 should be present; factors from 3 will add supporting documentation.)
1. The patient should show both a and b:
2. End stage liver disease is present and the patient shows at least one of the following:
3. Documentation of the following factors will support eligibility for hospice care:
Patients will be considered to be in the terminal stage of pulmonary disease (life expectancy of six months or less) if they meet the following criteria. The criteria refer to patients with various forms of advanced pulmonary disease who eventually follow a final common pathway for end stage pulmonary disease. (1 and 2 should be present. Documentation of 3, 4, and 5, will lend supporting documentation.)
1. Severe chronic lung disease as documented by both a and b:
2. Hypoxemia at rest on room air, as evidenced by pO2 less than or equal to 55 mmHg, or oxygen saturation less than or equal to 88%, determined either by arterial blood gases or oxygen saturation monitors, (these values may be obtained from recent hospital records) OR hypercapnia, as evidenced by pCO2 greater than or equal to 50 mmHg. (This value may be obtained from recent [within 3 months] hospital records.)
3. Right heart failure (RHF) secondary to pulmonary disease (Cor pulmonale) (e.g., not secondary to left heart disease or valvulopathy).
4. Unintentional progressive weight loss of greater than 10% of body weight over the preceding six months.
5. Resting tachycardia > 100/min.
Patients will be considered to be in the terminal stage of renal disease (life expectancy of six months or less) if they meet the following criteria.
Acute Renal Failure (1 and either 2, 3 or 4 should be present. Factors from 5 will lend supporting documentation.)
1 and either 2, 3 or 4 should be present. Factors from 5 will lend supporting documentation.
1. The patient is not seeking dialysis or renal transplant, or is discontinuing dialysis; As with any other condition, an individual with renal disease is eligible for the Hospice benefit if that individual has a prognosis of six months or less, if the illness runs its normal course. There is no regulation precluding patients on dialysis from electing Hospice care. However, the continuation of dialysis will significantly alter a patient’s prognosis, and thus potentially impact that individual’s eligibility.
When an individual elects Hospice care for end stage renal disease (ESRD) or for a condition to which the need for dialysis is related, the Hospice agency is financially responsible for the dialysis. In such cases, there is no additional reimbursement beyond the per diem rate. The only situation in which a beneficiary may access both the hospice benefit and the ESRD benefit is when the need for dialysis is not related to the patient’s terminal illness.
2. Creatinine clearance <10 cc/min (< 15 cc/min for diabetics); or < 15cc/min (< 20cc/min for diabetics) with comorbidity of congestive heart failure.
3. Serum creatinine > 8.0 mg/dl (>6.0 mg/dl for diabetics).
4. Signs and symptoms of renal failure:
5. Estimated glomerular filtration rate (GFR) <10 ml/min.
Patients will be considered to be in the terminal stages of stroke or coma (life expectancy of six months or less) if they meet the following criteria:
Stroke
1. Karnofsky Performance Status (KPS) or Palliative Performance Scale (PPS) of < 40% .
2. Inability to maintain hydration and caloric intake with one of the following:
Coma (any etiology):
1. Comatose patients with any 3 of the following on day three of coma:
2. Documentation of the following factors will support eligibility for hospice care:
Documentation of medical complications, in the context of progressive clinical decline, within the previous 12 months, which support a terminal prognosis:
3. Documentation of diagnostic imaging factors which support poor prognosis after stroke include:
a. For non-traumatic hemorrhagic stroke:
b. For thrombotic/embolic stroke:
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