I am so frustrated. Hospice says they will drop my MIL on Tues because her decline is not rapid enough. So the hospice bed, catheter, hoyer lift, catheter, etc all goes back.
Then I will go somewhere else to rent it all.
Then I may re-apply someday.
Problem is..........she IS declining. But not quickly enough.
Just frustrated. I hate being assessed by the government.
She is getting great care from me. And that has worked against me.
Venting.................
I believe that the rules for hospice when dementia is the "only" morbidity factor have tightened.
My mother has dementia and went on hospice care after she broke a hip. She was expected to die within weeks. After three months of progressive improvement, she was discharged from hospice care. My sisters and I agreed that she was no longer on the short path to death and did not need the extra attention from hospice. BUT we were concerned about the equipment hospice had provided. In many cases Medicare can provide the same or similar equipment, and Medicaid will cover supplies. Some of the things hospice was providing were no longer needed.
I am sorry that you are losing the extra attention and care, but you don't have to lose all the equipment. It is just a bit more hassle to get it provided. Hospice is awesome at cutting red tape. Now you are back to dealing with red tape. It can be done, but I am sorry you must deal with it. Perhaps the hospice social worker can advise you on shortcuts to get what you need.
It's the hospice doctor who must prove to medicare that my MIL is worse than she was 60 days ago. She is 89 years old with late stage alzheimers and cannot feed herself. She is completely bedbound and incontinent (bowel and urine).
She has no bedsores at all and no other serious conditions other than the alzheimers. She is able to talk on occasion but mostly nonsense.
Medicare is apparently cracking down on alzheimers in particular because patients can live for a long time. So she needs another problem - like a bedsore or something. Anyway, for the assessment..........she ended up looking and acting the best ever. Not a good thing. So there is a hearing about our case on Tuesday. Doesn't look good.
Yuk. That's just how I feel.
I Googled, and it seems that hospice does cover Alzheimer's. Perhaps it's a question of stage: http://www.alz.org/stl/documents/hospice_info.pdf
There's something very wrong about pulling her hospice care when she can't feed herself. If you elected to stop feeding her, she wouldn't survive. There's something wrong there...
I wish you very good luck at the hearing. Maybe it's one of those things that, if you jump through the appropriate hoops, they will allow it to continue. I hope so.
Maybe there's something here that will help you at the hearing:
Quote: Hospice still quotes the Six Month Rule but they use the new guidelines to qualify a Loved One to be covered by Medicare. Many hospices would not have the financial resources to care for those in end stage Alzheimer’s Disease without Medicare coverage. The general guidelines are that the Loved One be in Stage 7 of the disease (according to Reisenberg’s seven stage scale) and have some form of complication, such as:
Unable to ambulate without assistance;
Unable to dress without assistance;
Unable to bathe properly;
Urinary and fecal incontinence; and
Unable to speak or communicate meaningfully.
The complications that may be present at the time of qualification may be:
Aspiration pneumonia;
Signs of a recent stroke;
Upper urinary tract infections;
Bed Sores or Decubitus ulcers (multiple, stage 3-4);
Recurrent fever after antibiotics; and/or
Difficulty in swallowing/refusing food.
ec-online/knowledge/articles/hospiceknox.html
Yes, the feeding thing makes me wonder. She just opens her mouth wide and I have to put the food in. All the saliva makes me queasy ....
Because she performed well during the evaluation is largely due to the excellent care you are providing but I think if you stress the inability to obtain nutrition it may and I say may alter their perspective. We were told when my MIL took to her bed to expect her to die within six months because that is usually the pattern with dementia. My specialty is end of life care and although some patients do become disturbed and apparently demented at the end of life this is not the norm for hospice patients. if you want the service to continue you need to make a strong case to have them stay. I do understand their nervousness about keeping a patient with dementia enrolled for over 7 months. It is a very fine line.
werner-saumweber./alzheime/7stages.htm
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