Understanding the PEPPER Report

Understanding the PEPPER Report

The PEPPER report target areas focus on statistics that will identify potential for improper Medicare billing. Comparison to national, jurisdictional, and state percentiles can highlight a hospice agency’s potential need for change to its practices to guard against improper billing. Hospice agencies can leverage the information on these reports to prioritize internal audit and efforts to ensure accurate billing.

Why did CMS focus on the target areas in the PEPPER report?

  • Concern: Are patients eligible and is the agency providing good quality of care?
  • Target Areas: Live discharges – no longer terminally ill or patient revocation
  • Discussion: A hospice may discharge a patient alive because the patient is no longer eligible, the patient revoked, the patient moved out of the service area, or for cause. The first two reasons are concerning. These reasons for live discharge may indicate that the hospice is admitting patients who are not hospice eligible. If the patient revoked it may indicate that the quality of care is lacking.
  • Concern: Is a hospice agency trying to take advantage of the high routine home care rate?
  • Target Area: Live discharge with length of stay between 61-179 days
  • Discussion:  CMS pays a higher rate for the first 60 days of routine home care; the rate of payment is lower for days 61+. High incidence of live discharge in days 61+ may indicate the hospice agency is driven by financial concerns and wants to discharge patients once the rate drops.
  • Concern: Is the hospice agency admitting ineligible patients?
  • Target Area: Long length of stay
  • Discussion: The hospice may be admitting ineligible patients and therefore have an unusually long length of stay as compared to its peers
  • Concern: Is the hospice agency targeting patients in more profitable care settings?
  • Target Area: Services provided in assisted living facilities
  • Discussion:  An OIG study published in January 2015 found that Medicare payments for hospice care to patients in assisted living facilities increased significantly.  While the diagnoses of patients in this setting typically involved less complex care, these patients remained on hospice longer and hospices received higher payments than for patients in other settings. There is therefore a need to monitor whether hospices are targeting patients in more profitable care settings including assisted living facilities, skilled nursing facilities, and nursing facilities.
  • Concern: Is a hospice agency accurately reporting all diagnoses on the claim?
  • Target Area: Claims with a single diagnosis code:
  • Discussion:  A hospice should report on the hospice claim the principle diagnosis and all diagnoses related to the terminal illness and related conditions.  A hospice agency that has an unusually high number of claims with a single diagnosis may indicate that the hospice is not reporting all related diagnoses.
  • Concern: Is the hospice agency meeting Medicare CoP and able to offer all four levels of care?
  • Target Area: No general inpatient or continuous home care
  • Discussion:  Medicare Conditions of Participation require hospices to demonstrate they can provide all four levels of care: routine home care, general inpatient care, inpatient respite care, and continuous home care to be a Medicare certified hospice provider. A report published by CMS in 2014, included an analysis of 2012 hospice claims:
  • 3% of beneficiaries did not have any general inpatient care in 2012
  • 1% of hospice agencies did not provide any general inpatient care to any of their patients
  • 4% of all hospice days billed in 2012 were billed as continuous home care
  • 7% of hospice agencies billed at least one day of continuous home care but the share of continuous home care days billed varied across hospice agencies that billed any continuous home care days
  • Almost 90% of hospice agencies that provided continuous home care had less than 1% of their days billed as continuous home care
  • Four hospices billed more than 10% of their days as continuous home care.

This target area aims to monitor that hospice agencies are meeting the hospice Conditions of Participation and are able to provide all four levels of care.

  • Concern: Is general inpatient care being used appropriately and are patient symptoms being managed well?
  • Target Area: Long general inpatient stays
  • Discussion:  General inpatient stays are intended to be short term, to treat acute symptoms. If a patient has extended general inpatient stay there this level of care is not being used appropriately or that symptoms are not being properly managed.
  • Concern: Is Medicare making prescription drug Part D payments when these should be paid by the hospice agency?
  • Target Area: Medicare Part D payments for hospice beneficiaries
  • Discussion:  Hospice agencies are paid a per diem rate for each day that a patient is in hospice care, irrespective of the services that the hospice agency provides to the patient. Drugs that the hospice agency provides to the patient are included in the hospice rate. In 2019, CMS released a report analyzing 2016 Medicare Part D payments being made for beneficiaries on hospice care. Part D is the Medicare prescription drug plan.  The study focused on four categories of drugs that are often prescribed to patients at the end of their lives as well as two disease specific drugs for two diseases. Part D should not pay for drugs if the patient is on hospice and the drug is covered under the hospice benefit.  Based upon sample results, CMS estimates that Medicare paid $160.8 million for drugs that hospice agencies should have paid for, constituting and overpayment to hospice.


How can a hospice use this information?

With a better understanding of the underlying motivation for each of these target areas, a hospice agency should carefully look at the data on its PEPPER reports to identify any metrics that indicate a need for further investigation and possible process improvements. These reports are a powerful way to benchmark a hospice agency’s performance relative to itself (over a running three year period) as well as relative to other hospice agencies – across the nation, in its state, and in its MAC jurisdiction.

Where can you get more information?

What is Hospice Visits in the Last Days of Life (HVLDL)?

What is Hospice Visits in the Last Days of Life (HVLDL)?

HVLDL is an HQRP claims-based measure of the proportion of patients who have received in-person visits from a registered nurse (RN) or a medical social worker (MSW) on at least two of the final three days of life. This metric replaces the HIS-based measure Hospice Visits When Death is Imminent (HVWDII).

CMS selected this metric as an important measure of quality since it is during these final days that patients most likely exhibit extreme symptoms of actively dying. This time period is also when patients most often exhibit signs of onset of clinical signs of dying. Finally, consistent visits in the final days of life are perceived as better level of care by the patient’s family.

How are the final three days of life defined?

For the purposes of HVLDL, the final three days of life are defined as:

  • Day 1: day of death
  • Day 2: day prior to death
  • Day 3: day two days prior to death

How are days counted?

  • This metric counts days, not visits
  • If an RN and a MSW each visit the patient on the same day, this counts as a single day not as two visits, since the metric counts days not visits
  • Telephonic visits do not count toward this metric, only in person visits
  • Visits by LPN, chaplains, or other clinical staff do not count toward this metric

Which patients are included in the calculation of HVLDL?

All Medicare fee for service hospice patients are included in this metric with the following exceptions:

  • Patients who did not die in hospice care
  • Patients who received continuous care, respite care, or general inpatient care in the final three days of life
  • Patients who were enrolled in hospice care for fewer than three days

Since HVLDL measures visits over the final three days of life, a patient must have been enrolled in hospice for at last three days to be included in the metric.

What are the data sources for this metric?

Data for HVLDL is calculated from Medicare claims data. Only data for Medicare fee for service patients who died while in hospice and who do not meet any of the exceptions listed above are included in the HVLDL calculation. 

CMS calculates HVLDL using eight consecutive quarters of data.  Hospice agencies with fewer than 20 “eligible patients” in the reporting period (where an “eligible patient” is defined as a patient who has died while under hospice care and does not fall under any of the exceptions listed above) are not assigned an HVLDL value. By including eight quarters of data, CMS is expanding the set of hospice agencies for which an HVLDL value will be reported. CMS will update the HVLDL value once each year.

How is the HVLDL metric calculated?

  • The denominator is the count of all “eligible patients” during the reporting period
  • The numerator is the count of all “eligible patients” who received an RN or MSW visit on at least two of the three final days of life

When was HVLDL introduced and where can patients and their families view the HVLDL value?

HVLDL was added to the HQRP in 2021 and began public reporting in 2022.  The metric provides insight into care provided by the hospice agency in the days immediately leading up to patient death. HVLDL can be seen under the Quality of Patient Care section on the Care Compare website.  

How can a hospice see its HVLDL value?

To support a hospice agency’s quality improvement efforts, CMS shares the agency’s HVLDL value in the Hospice Agency Level QM Report in CASPER. CASPER reports separately the numerator and denominator of HVLDL as well as the hospice observed percent – the agency’s HVLDL score. CASPER also reports on the national average HVLDL score and the agency’s percentile. Percentile rank indicates what percentage of agencies nationwide had a HVLDL score that was equal to or lower than the agency’s score. A hospice agency can benchmark its HVLDL score with the national average and the percentile rank. It can also trend its performance against its own HVLDL value over time.

Why did CMS replace the HIS HVWDII?

CMS implemented HVWDII in 2017. This metric measured hospice visits by non-clinical team members including LPN, chaplain, MSW, and hospice aides during the final seven days of a patient’s life. Analyzing the data collected by this metric, CMS found that HVWDII was unable to distinguish between high quality and low quality hospice agencies (i.e., it failed the CMS validity testing criteria).  Consequently, CMS sought a replacement metric.  The revised metric is also aligned with the Service Intensity Add-On (SIA) payment initiative (which incentivizes visits by RN and MSW near patient’s death). HVLDL has an added benefit that it is calculated based on claims data so it does not add a reporting burden for hospice agencies.

Where can you learn more?

Image from Medalogix

What is Hospice Care Index (HCI)?

What is Hospice Care Index (HCI)?

HCI is a single comprehensive metric reflecting ten indicators of care delivered during a hospice stay — from admission to discharge.  This metric, which is included in the patient Care Compare portal, is intended to provide patients, families, and caregivers with an added metric to support informed healthcare choices.

What are the data sources for this metric?

HCI is calculated from Medicare claims data.  A hospice agency does not need to submit any additional data to CMS for the calculation of this metric. The HCI metric captures care processes throughout the duration of a patient’s hospice care – from admission through discharge. Only data for Medicare fee for service patients who have been discharged from hospice is included in the HCI metric.  CMS calculates HCI using eight consecutive quarters of data.  Hospice agencies with fewer than 20 discharges in the reporting period are not assigned an HCI value. By including eight quarters of data, CMS is expanding the set of hospice agencies for which an HCI value will be reported. CMS will update the HCI metrics once each year.

What does the HCI metric measure?

HCI is a single comprehensive metric comprised of the following ten individual indicators of care.

  • CHC/GIP provided
  • Gaps in skilled nursing visits
  • Early live discharges
  • Late live discharges
  • Burdensome transitions (Type 1)
  • Burdensome Transitions (Type 2)
  • Per-beneficiary Medicare spending
  • Nurse care minutes per routine home care days
  • Skilled nursing minutes on weekends
  • Visits near death

Each indicator measures a different aspect of hospice care. A set of the HCI indicators measure the agency’s provision of higher level of care as needed and more frequent visits closer to the time of death, as measured by indicators

  • Gaps in skilled nursing visits
  • Nurse care minutes per routine home care day
  • Skilled nursing minutes on weekends
  • Visits near death

A set of HCI indicators measure patterns of live discharges and transitions, as measured by indicators

  • Discharges from hospice followed by hospitalization and hospice readmission
  • Discharge from hospice followed by patient dying in the hospital
  • Early live discharges
  • Late live discharges

Finally, an HCI indicator is used to measure appropriateness of use of the hospice benefit

  • Per beneficiary Medicare spending

Medicare’s overall objectives of the HCI metric are twofold: (i) to ensure that all hospice patients are receiving the care that they need and (ii) to identify indicators of fraud.

How is the HCI metric calculated?

The HCI metric simultaneously monitors all ten indicators of care.  The ten indicators are then combined into a single value between zero and ten, where ten is the highest value. Each indicator equally affects the HCI value, reflecting how each aspect of care delivered, from admission to discharge, shares the same level of importance.

Specifically, the hospice agency is awarded one point for each of the ten indicator criteria the agency meets.  A hospice receives a point for an indicator if its value exceeds a prescribed threshold. The threshold is determined as a function of the overall values for that indicator across all hospice agencies. The more indicators a hospice agency meets, the higher the agency’s HCI value. The sum of the points earned from meeting the criterion for each indicator yields the agency’s aggregated single HCI value.  

When was HCI introduced and where can the metric be viewed?

The HCI metric was added to the HQRP and began public reporting in 2022.  

The single aggregate HCI metric can be seen under the Quality of Patient Care section on the Care Compare website.  

The details of the HCI metric – including the values for each of the ten individual HCI indicators – can be found in the Provider Data Catalog.

How can a hospice see details about its HCI value?

To support a hospice agency’s quality improvement efforts, CMS shares the details of an agency’s HCI indicator scores in the Hospice Agency Level QM Report in CASPER. An agency can benchmark its indicator values with state and national averages. It can also trend its performance in each indicator over time.

Where can you learn more?

Image from Home Care Pulse

What is the Hospice Election Statement requirement?

What is the Hospice Election Statement requirement?

To receive hospice services under the Medicare benefit, a patient or his authorized representative must elect hospice care. 

If the patient or authorized representative elects to receive hospice care, the patient must file an election statement with a specific hospice agency. The election statement serves to indicate that the patient is choosing hospice care. 

The election statement and the election statement addendum are conditions for payment.

What is the structure of a hospice election form?

Every hospice agency can design and create their own hospice election statement form although Medicare has published a model form that can be used by hospice agencies Model Hospice Election Statement.  The election statement must include all of the following elements:

  • Name of hospice agency that will be providing the services
  • Acknowledge that nature of hospice services have been explained to the patient including, in particular, the palliative rather than curative nature of care
  • Acknowledge patient understands that by electing hospice care, some Medicare services are waived 
  • For hospice elections beginning on or after October 1, 2020, a statement that although it would be rare, there could be some necessary items, drugs, or services that may not be covered by hospice because these items are deemed to be unrelated to the terminal illness or related conditions
  • The effective date of the election. This may be the first day of hospice care of a later day. But it cannot be a date that precedes the date that the election statement was signed by the patient or their authorized representative. 
  • The individual who is serving as the patient’s attending physician, if any.
  • Acknowledgement that the identified attending physician was the choice of the patient or authorized representative
  • Signature of patient or authorized representative

There are some additional requirements for the election statements for elections beginning dated October 1, 2020 or later. These election statements must also include : 

  • Information on patient cost sharing for hospice services
  • Notification of the patient or authorized representative right to receive an addendum to the election statement. The addendum is only required to be furnished to beneficiaries, their authorized representatives, non-hospice providers, or Medicare contractors who request this information. This addendum includes a list and rationale for the items, drugs, or services that are not covered by hospice services because the hospice has deemed these to be unrelated to the terminal illness and related conditions. 
  • Information on the Beneficiary and Family Centered Care Quality Improvement Organization (Beneficiary and Family Centered Care (BFCC) ), including that immediate advocacy is available through this organization if the patient disagrees with the hospice’s determination regarding non-covered services

Right to Request Patient Notification of Non-Covered Items, Services, And Drugs

At any time, a patient may request, in writing, the Patient Notification of Hospice Non-Covered Items, Services, and Drugs. addendum to the election statement. 

The hospice agency must provide the notification within five days, if this request is made on the start of care date. 

If the request is made during the course of hospice care, the hospice agency must provide the requested notification within 72 hours.

If the patient (or authorized representative) requests the addendum at the start of care but dies with five days, the hospice is deemed to have met its requirement and is not required to provide the addendum.

When would a hospice update the addendum?

The addendum lists the patient’s diagnoses and conditions that are present upon hospice admission and the items, services, and drugs that are not covered by the hospice because they are deemed to be unrelated to the terminal illness and related conditions.

During the course of hospice care, the addendum may require update, for example, if the patient’s plan of care is updated.

Changes to the addendum will need to be signed by the patient or his authorized representative and stored in the patient’s medical record with the hospice agency. 

Where can you find more information on the election statement

Hospice Acronym Alphabet Soup

Are you confused by the Acronym Alphabet Soup?

Does the never ending list of acronyms used in the hospice and healthcare industry leave you confused?

Are you worried that you may confuse CMN with CMP?

To help sort out the confusion, we add here links to lists of acronyms:

Use these acronym listings to help clarify things when you inevitably are faced with acronym confusion!

What is Face to Face Recertification?

What is Face to Face Recertification?

A hospice face to face encounter is a step in patient recertification beginning with the third benefit period and each benefit period thereafter. The goal of hospice face to face patient encounter is to encourage greater involvement of the physician in the care of patients who have been on hospice for an extended period of time.  These patients will require a face to face visit from the physician or from a hospice nurse practitioner who will determine continued hospice eligibility.  The face to face encounter is one part of hospice recertification. As such, the face to face encounter will also occur prior to recertification.

When must a face to face encounter take place?

A  face to face encounter must take place within 30 days prior to the start of the patient’s third benefit period. It also must take place within 30 days prior to each subsequent benefit period. The requirement for a face to face encounter considers the patient’s hospice stays across all hospices. For example, if a patient spent 100 days at Hospice Agency A and then switched to Hospice Agency B, Hospice Agency B will need to conduct a face to face encounter within 50-80 days of the patient’s admission. That is, when the patient is admitted to hospice B the days of counting toward the face to face encounter begin from the first day that the patient entered any hospice care.

How will I know if the patient has had prior hospice care?

Upon admitting a patient, the hospice agency should check the Common Working File to determine the patient benefit period and whether a face to face encounter is required.

Who may conduct the face to face encounter?

Either the hospice physician or nurse practitioner (NP) may conduct the face to face encounter. The hospice physician may be an employee or contracted by the hospice agency. If the NP conducts the face to face encounter, the NP must be an employee of the hospice and is not permitted to be a contractor (since nursing is a core service).

What should the recertification narrative include?

The third benefit recertification – and each subsequent recertification – will need to contain clinical findings that support continued hospice eligibility.  The narrative must include an explanation of why the clinical findings support a life expectancy of six months or less. 

If the physician conducts the face to face, he or she will be responsible to write the narrative about the clinical findings regarding the patient’s condition and for certifying the patient’s continued eligibility for hospice.

If the nurse practitioner conducts the face to face encounter, he or she will report back the clinical findings to the interdisciplinary team as well as to the hospice physician who will certify as to whether the patient is eligible for continued hospice care. 

The recertification requires an attestation

The clinician who conducts the face to face encounter must attest in writing that the face to face encounter was performed with the patient and must include the date that the encounter occurred. 

If an NP conducts the encounter, the NP must attest that the clinical findings were sent to the certifying physician. 

The attestation is signed and dated in is included as a separate and distinct section of the recertification.  The recertification also clearly notes the benefit period dates for which the recertification applies.

What happens if the face to face does not take place timely?

If the face to face does not take place, the patient is considered no longer considered terminally ill and therefore is not eligible for the Medicare hospice benefit. The patient remains ineligible until such time that the face to face encounter occurs and it is confirmed that the patient is once again hospice eligible. The patient must be discharged from the hospice but can be readmitted once the face to face encounter occurs. Medicare does permit the hospice agency to continue to provide services at the agency’s expense until the patient’s eligibility is reestablished. However, this care will be provided outside of the Medicare hospice benefit.