Image via WikipediaThe Department of Health and Human Services' Office of Inspector General has released the following report: Questionable Billing by Skilled Nursing Facilities (OEI-02-09-00202) http://go.usa.gov/rCy
Skilled nursing facilities (SNF) categorize beneficiaries into resource
utilization groups (RUG) based on their care and resource needs.
Medicare generally pays the most for ultra high therapy RUGs. Medicare
also pays more for RUGs for beneficiaries who require more assistance
with certain activities of daily living, such as eating.
The OIG found that SNFs increasingly billed Medicare for higher paying RUGs from 2006 to 2008, even though beneficiary characteristics remained largely unchanged. Specifically, they found large increases in RUGs for ultra high therapy, with payments to SNFs for ultra high therapy increasing by nearly 90 percent from 2006 to 2008, rising from $5.7 billion to $10.7 billion. In addition, RUGs for high levels of assistance with daily activities increased. The investigators also found that for-profit SNFs were far more likely than nonprofit or government SNFs to bill for higher paying RUGs, and that a number of SNFs had questionable billing in 2008. Taken together, these findings raise concerns about the potentially inappropriate use of higher paying RUGs, particularly those for ultra high therapy.
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