1. Limited part-time or intermittent skilled nursing care and home health aide services, as well as other health-related services given to the patient in his or her home. Examples of palliative and therapeutic care are assistance with medications, wound care, intravenous (IV) therapy, help with basic needs (e.g., bathing, dressing, mobility), physical and rehabilitation therapy, nursing, counseling, and social services. Usually this care is given to elderly, disabled, sick, or convalescent patients who do not need care in a facility. These services are provided by home health agencies (HHAs), hospitals, and other community organizations. Medicare pays for home care only if the type of care needed is skilled and required on an intermittent basis and is intended to help people recover or improve from an illness, not to provide unskilled services over a long period of time. There is no beneficiary cost sharing for home health care services. Also known as home care . 2. In Medicare fraud, certification or recertification by a provider of the need for home health care services, knowing that all of the requirements relating to being homebound and medical necessity have not been met.
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Home health plan certification
Physician receives, reviews, adjusts treatment, documents the plan in coordination with the care of the home health agency, and then bills for this service. For subsequent plan adjustment, see home health plan recertification .
Home health plan recertification
Physician receives, reviews, adjusts treatment, documents the plan in coordination with the care of the home health agency, and then bills for this subsequent plan adjustment. For initial certification, see home health plan certification .
Home health services
Supplies and services provided to patients by health care professionals in a patient’s home. These individuals suffer from an injury, illness, or disabling condition or are terminally ill and require short- or long-term care. For Medicare to pay for the benefits, the services must be prescribed by a physician. Services consist of audiology, dental, medical supplies, part-time or intermittent skilled nursing care, nutrition counseling, occupational therapy, pediatric therapy, physical therapy, some rehabilitation equipment, social services, and speech-language pathology.
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Health care services provided by a licensed home health agency in the patient’s home.
Home health services (Health Insurance)
Home health care covered by Part A of Medicare. This care is provided by a licensed agent.
Home health visit
Service provided at the place of residence of a patient by a professional health worker.
Home income plans
Equity release schemes such as lifetime mortgages whereby an elderly person mortgages his or her house to an insurance company or other institution to fund an annuity (joint life and survivor annuity for couples). Mortgage interest is met from the annuity instalments (or deferred until death) leaving an income for the homeowner(s). The loan, up to 80% of the value, and any rolled-up interest is repaid on death but the estate benefits from any capital appreciation. Compare with home reversion plan.
Home medical equipment
See: Durable Medical Equipment (DME) .
Home office
The corporate headquarters of an insurance company.
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Generally the corporate headquarters of insurers and the location where the chief officers of the organization are housed. See Also: “Head Office.” The term used in USA is Home Office instead of Head Office.
Home office administration
System in which the insurance company maintains all clients’ basic insurance agreement records at the home office.