intro":"Additional required content consolidated from completeness review: change of ownership, plan of care requirements and signatures, timing and reviews, termination, qualifying services sequencing; face‑to‑face encounter provider types, timeframe and telehealth; detailed skilled nursing and therapy application and limits; supplies and NPWT billing; visit counting and part‑time/intermittent rules; medical and other health services furnished by HHAs and related practitioner certification for those services.","nodes":["{\"operator\":\"all\",\"children\":[{\"text\":\"Change of Ownership — Billing Implications: When an HHA undergoes change of ownership (CHOW), Medicare billing responsibility for periods of care and episodes follows statutory rules. Agencies must determine whether assignment of Medicare benefits exists and bill accordingly; documentation of ownership change and effective dates must be maintained.\"},{\"text\":\"Change of Ownership — With Assignment: If the HHA holds an assignment, the successor HHA bills Medicare for services furnished on or after the effective date of the change of ownership for applicable periods/episodes per HH PPS rules. Ensure NOA and episode sequencing reflect the CHOW.\"},{\"text\":\"Change of Ownership — Without Assignment: If assignment is not in effect, beneficiary liability and billing follow statutory direction; providers must notify beneficiaries of potential billing changes and document the CHOW and any required beneficiary acknowledgments.\"},{\"text\":\"Plan of Care Requirements: The plan of care must specify diagnoses, types, amounts, frequency, and duration of each service, measurable goals, and the identity of responsible practitioners; it must be established and periodically reviewed by the physician or allowed practitioner.\"},{\"text\":\"Plan of Care Signatures, Timing, and Reviews: Plans must be signed and dated by the certifying physician or allowed practitioner prior to or at the time services are furnished whenever feasible; periodic reviews (at least each certification period or sooner if condition changes) must be documented. Facsimile signatures and alternative signature methods are allowed when compliant with CMS rules.\"},{\"text\":\"Termination of Plan of Care: The plan of care must be terminated when the beneficiary no longer requires skilled services or no longer meets home health eligibility; termination date, clinical rationale, and notification must be documented.\"},{\"text\":\"Qualifying Services and Sequence: A qualifying skilled service (nursing, PT, SLP, or continued OT) must occur as part of the plan of care. Sequence rules: skilled services that qualify a beneficiary must precede or be contemporaneous with other services billed under the plan; consolidated billing and episode sequencing rules apply.\"},{\"text\":\"Face‑to‑Face Encounter — Allowed Provider Types: Allowed providers include physicians and certain non‑physician practitioners (NPPs) such as nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and clinical nurse specialists acting within state scope of practice as permitted by Medicare.\"},{\"text\":\"Face‑to‑Face Encounter — Timeframe: The face‑to‑face encounter must occur within the timeframe required by Medicare (typically within 90 days prior to the start of care, or within 30 days after hospital discharge when applicable) and must be related to the primary reason for home health care.\"},{\"text\":\"Telehealth for Face‑to‑Face Encounter: Telehealth encounters (real‑time audio/video) may satisfy the face‑to‑face requirement when permitted by CMS; documentation must note the modality, provider identity, clinical findings, and relation to home health need.\"},{\"text\":\"Skilled Nursing Services — Coverage Principles: Skilled nursing is covered when the services require the professional skills of a nurse for assessment, observation, training, administration of complex treatments or procedures, or management of the plan of care. Documentation must show why skills are necessary.\"},{\"text\":\"Skilled Nursing — When Not Skilled: Routine assistance with activities of daily living, custodial care, or simple medication reminders that do not require professional skill are non‑covered as skilled nursing.\"},{\"text\":\"Management and Evaluation of Care Plan: Skilled providers must perform ongoing assessment, adjustment, and coordination of care; documentation of changes, teaching, and outcomes is required to support skilled need and billing.\"},{\"text\":\"Skilled Nursing — Teaching and Training Activities: Teaching/training family or caregivers is skilled when it requires professional judgment and instruction to manage complex clinical care (e.g., wound care, ostomy care, tube feeding). The plan of care must document training goals, who is trained, and competency achieved.\"},{\"text\":\"Limits on Teaching/Training: Non‑skilled caregiver instruction limited to routine ADL assistance or simple tasks not requiring clinical judgment is not skilled. Time and content of teaching should be commensurate with complexity.\"},{\"text\":\"Examples of Teaching/Training that Are Skilled Nursing: Instruction in sterile dressing changes for complex wounds, parenteral or enteral administration training, catheter care with complex stoma or ostomy management, and instruction involving clinical judgment or assessment.\"},{\"text\":\"Injections and Administration of Medications: Injectable therapies and complex medication administration that require professional skill (parenteral injections, IV medications, specialized monitoring) are skilled services when clinically indicated and documented.\"},{\"text\":\"Oral Medications, Eye Drops, Topical Ointments: Routine administration of oral medications or simple topical applications that do not require nursing judgment are not skilled; exceptions apply when monitoring, adjustment, or clinical assessment by a nurse is required.\"},{\"text\":\"Tube Feedings, Aspiration, Catheters, Wound Care, Ostomy Care, Heat Treatments, Medical Gases, Rehabilitation Nursing, Venipuncture, Student Nurse Visits, Psychiatric Nursing: These services may be skilled when they require professional skill, assessment, or management; student nurse visits must be supervised appropriately and billed only when supervision and competencies meet Medicare requirements.\"},{\"text\":\"Skilled Therapy Services — General Principles: PT, OT, and SLP must be reasonable and necessary, require skilled services, have measurable goals, and be provided by qualified therapists in accordance with the plan of care.\"},{\"text\":\"General Skilled Therapy Coverage Conditions: Therapy is covered when skilled intervention is needed to restore function, to improve, or to maintain the patient’s condition when skilled services are necessary to safely maintain function. Documentation of progress or maintenance rationale is required.\"},{\"text\":\"Physical Therapy — Application: PT services must address mobility, strength, pain, or functional limitations requiring skilled PT assessment and intervention; frequency and duration must be justified.\"},{\"text\":\"Speech‑Language Pathology — Application: SLP services must address communication or swallowing disorders requiring skilled assessment and intervention; documentation must include evaluation findings and treatment goals.\"},{\"text\":\"Occupational Therapy — Application: OT services must address self‑care, ADL/IADL limitations, and home environment safety requiring skilled OT assessment and training; continued need must be documented for ongoing OT.\"},{\"text\":\"Home Health Aide Services — Coverage Conditions: Aide services are covered when they are part of a plan that includes intermittent skilled services and are supervised; aide services are not covered as a sole qualifying service.\"},{\"text\":\"Medical Social Services — Coverage Conditions and Criteria: Medical social services are covered when necessary to identify and treat social and emotional factors related to the beneficiary’s illness, and when provided by qualified social workers as part of the plan of care.\"},{\"text\":\"Medical Supplies — Routine vs Nonroutine and Bundling: Routine medical supplies that are incident to home health and not separately reportable are included in the HH PPS payment; nonroutine and reportable supplies are billed per Medicare policy and may be included or excluded from the period payment rate per rules.\"},{\"text\":\"Negative Pressure Wound Therapy (Disposable Device) — Billing and Payment Transition: NPWT disposable devices must be billed by the HHA using the specified HCPCS codes when furnished under a plan of care; payment and billing follow the transitional rules and are excluded from the 30‑day period rate as applicable.\"},{\"text\":\"Visit Definition and Counting: A visit is one encounter by a qualified clinician or aide for the provision of services; counting rules for visits, episode limits, and encounter aggregation must follow Medicare guidance for payment and benefit limits.\"},{\"text\":\"Part‑Time or Intermittent Home Health Aide and Skilled Nursing Services: 'Part‑time or intermittent' generally refers to services that are less than full‑time and provided on a periodic basis; provision of excessive visits beyond intermittent may trigger utilization review to determine appropriateness.\"},{\"text\":\"Medical and Other Health Services Furnished by HHAs (When Not Under a HHA Plan of Care): Services provided outside a valid plan of care or without required certification are not covered under Medicare home health benefit; separate practitioner certification may be required for other medical services furnished by the HHA.\"},{\"text\":\"Physician or Allowed Practitioner Certification for Medical and Other Health Services Furnished by HHA: When HHAs furnish medical and other health services outside the home health benefit, a physician or allowed practitioner must certify medical necessity and appropriate billing per Medicare rules; documentation and signatures must be maintained.\"}]}]