Skip to main content

Military Health System

Utility Navigation Links

TRICARE Reimbursement Manual 6010.64-M, April 2021
Hospice
Chapter 11
Section 1
Hospice Reimbursement - General Overview
Issue Date:  February 6, 1995
Revision:  
1.0  APPLICABILITY
This policy is mandatory for reimbursement of services provided either by network or non-network providers. However, alternative network reimbursement methodologies are permitted when approved by the Defense Health Agency (DHA) and specifically included in the network provider agreement.
2.0  ISSUE
A general overview of the coverage and reimbursement of hospice care.
3.0  POLICY
3.1  Statutory Background
The National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for Fiscal Year (FY) 1992-1993, Public Law 102-190, directed TRICARE to provide hospice care in the manner and under the conditions provided in section 1861(dd) of the Social Security Act (42 USC 1395x(dd)). This section of the Social Security Act sets forth coverage/benefit guidelines, along with certification criteria for participation in a hospice program. Since it was Congress’ specific intent to establish a benefit identical to that of Medicare, the program has adopted the provisions currently set out in Medicare’s hospice coverage/benefit guidelines, reimbursement methodologies (including national hospice rates and wage indices), and certification criteria for participation in the hospice program (42 CFR 418, Hospice Care).
3.2  Scope of Coverage
The hospice benefit is designed to provide palliative care to individuals with prognoses of less than six months to live if the terminal illness runs its normal course. The benefit is based upon a patient and family-centered model where the views of the patient and family or friends figure predominantly in the care decisions. Since this type of care emphasizes supportive services, such as pain control and home care, rather than cure-oriented treatment, the hospice benefit is exempt from those limitations on custodial care and personal comfort items currently in force under the Basic Program. As a result, a beneficiary who elects to receive care under a hospice program cannot receive other Basic Program services/benefits (curative treatment related to the terminal illness unless the hospice care has been formally revoked), except for beneficiaries under the age of 21, as detailed in Section 5.
3.3  Reimbursement
3.3.1  National Medicare hospice rates will be used for reimbursement of each of the following levels of care provided by, or under arrangement with, a Medicare-approved hospice program:
•  Routine home care.
•  Continuous home care.
•  Inpatient respite care.
•  General inpatient care.
Note:  Reimbursement can be extended for routine and continuous hospice care provided to beneficiaries residing in a nursing home facility, that is, physician, nurse, social worker, and home health aide visits to patients requiring palliative care for a terminal illness. The TRICARE Program will not pay for the room and board charges of the nursing home.
3.3.2  The hospice will be reimbursed for the amount applicable to the type and intensity of the services furnished to the beneficiary on a particular day. One rate will be paid for each level of care except for continuous home care which will be reimbursed based on the number of hours of continuous care furnished to the beneficiary on a given day. The rates will be adjusted for regional differences by using appropriate Medicare area wage indices.
3.3.3  The national payment rates are designed to reimburse the hospice for the costs of all covered services related to the treatment of the beneficiary’s terminal illness, including the administrative and general supervisory activities performed by physicians who are employees of, or working under arrangements made with, the hospice. The only amounts which will be allowed outside the locally adjusted national payment rates will be for direct patient care services rendered by either an independent attending physician or physician employed by, or under contract with, the hospice program.
3.3.3.1  A beneficiary may receive a hospice consultation service from a physician who is the director or employee of the hospice program if the beneficiary:
•  Has not yet elected the hospice benefit at the time of consultation.
•  Has not been seen by the physician on a previous occasion.
Such consult shall be paid at the appropriate level and shall be equal or less in equivalent reimbursement for a doctor office visit by a patient presenting a problem of “moderate severity and requiring medical decision making of low complexity” under the TRICARE Program physician fee schedule and will exclude the practice expense component. The receipt and payment of such service shall not count toward the hospice cap amount.
3.3.3.2  The hospice will bill for its physician charges/services on a Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) 1450 UB-04 using the appropriate Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes. Payments for hospice-based physician services will be paid at 100% of the CHAMPUS Maximum Allowable Charge (CMAC) and will be subject to the hospice cap amount; i.e., it will be figured into the total hospice payments made during the cap period.
3.3.4  Independent attending physician services are not considered a part of the hospice benefit and are not figured into the cap amount calculations. The provider will bill for these services on a CMS 1500 Claim Form using the appropriate CPT codes. These services will be subject to TRICARE reimbursement and cost-sharing/deductible provisions.
3.4  Authorized Providers
3.4.1  Social workers, hospice counselors, and home health aides which are not otherwise authorized providers of care under Basic Program may provide those services necessary for the palliation or management of terminally ill patients electing hospice coverage. These services are part of a package of services for which there is single all-inclusive rate for each day of care.
3.4.2  Hospice programs.
3.4.2.1   Hospice programs must be Medicare certified and meet all Medicare conditions of participation (42 CFR 418) in relation to patients in order to receive payment under the TRICARE program.
3.4.2.2  The contractor shall not be responsible for certification of individuals employed by or contracted with a hospice program. The hospice program will be responsible for assuring that the individuals rendering hospice services meet the qualification standards specified in Section 2.
4.0  EFFECTIVE DATE
Implementation of the hospice program is effective for admissions occurring on or after June 1, 1995. Unless specified differently in sections of this instruction, this is to be considered the effective date for reimbursement of hospice care.
- END -
Follow us on Instagram Follow us on LinkedIn Follow us on Facebook Follow us on Twitter Follow us on YouTube Sign up on GovDelivery