Post-acute provider compliance risks: Patient charting and patient steering

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When hospitalized patients no longer require ongoing diagnostic or therapeutic interventions or close monitoring for their acute health conditions, they are ready for discharge from the hospital setting. But not all hospitalized patients are ready to return home at discharge and require further care. The hospital’s team must determine the most appropriate setting for the patient, so the patient can continue to recover and reduce the likelihood of re-injury or readmission to the hospital. This post-acute care (PAC) is often provided PAC providers, including long-term care hospitals (LTCHs), inpatient rehabilitation facilities (IRFs), skilled nursing facilities (SNFs), hospices, and home health agencies (HHAs).

PAC providers and hospitals must, out of necessity, work together to coordinate care of hospital patients ready for discharge. Beyond these required day-to-day interactions for treatment and care coordination-type activities, hospitals and PAC providers may also explore other ways to work together to improve care coordination, achieve value-based payment metrics, or further other shared objectives. While collaborations between hospitals and PAC providers can positively impact the quality of care provided to their respective patients, such collaborations can also create an environment that increases certain compliance risks for the PAC providers and hospitals.

The purpose of this article is to highlight “patient steering” and “patient charting”—two practices that have been identified by the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), and Office of Inspector General (OIG) as compliance risk areas under one or more federal laws. This article does not intend to identify all practices or arrangements between hospitals and PAC providers that could implicate federal law. In addition, laws of the state where the PAC provider and hospital operate should also be considered, including any state fraud and abuse and patient privacy laws. This article also offers practical tips to help identify and mitigate the risks associated with these practices for hospitals and PAC providers.

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