A qualifying inpatient hospital stay means you’ve been a hospital inpatient for at least 3 days in a row (counting the day you were admitted as an inpatient, but not counting the day of your discharge). Medicare will only cover care you get in a SNF if you first have a “qualifying inpatient hospital stay.” What are some example situations?
Time that you spend in a hospital as an outpatient before you're admitted doesn't count toward the 3-day qualifying inpatient hospital stay you need to get SNF benefits. How do hospital observation services affect my SNF coverage?
You may not need a 3-day minimum inpatient hospital stay if your doctor participates in an Accountable Care Organization or another type of Medicare initiative approved for a “Skilled Nursing Facility 3-Day Rule Waiver.” Always ask your doctor or hospital staff if Medicare will cover your SNF stay. Medicare Advantage Plans may also waive the 3-day minimum. Contact your plan for more information.
If you don’t have a 3-day qualifying inpatient hospital stay and you need care after your discharge from a hospital, ask if you can get care in other settings (like home health care) or if any other programs (like Medicaid or Veterans’ benefits) can cover your SNF care.
In each benefit period , you pay:
Part A limits SNF coverage to 100 days in each benefit period.
Your doctor or other health care provider may recommend you get services more often than Medicare covers. Or, they may recommend services that Medicare doesn’t cover. If this happens, you may have to pay some or all of the costs. Ask questions so you understand why your doctor is recommending certain services and if, or how much, Medicare will pay for them.
Skilled care is nursing and therapy care that can only be safely and effectively performed by, or under the supervision of, professionals or technical personnel. It’s health care given when you need skilled nursing or skilled therapy to treat, manage, and observe your condition, and evaluate your care.
Medicare-covered services in a skilled nursing facility include, but aren't limited to:
If you're in a SNF, there may be situations where you need to be readmitted to the hospital. If this happens, there's no guarantee that a bed will be available for you at the same SNF if you need more skilled care after your hospital stay. Ask the SNF if it will hold a bed for you if you must go back to the hospital. Also, ask if there's a cost to hold the bed for you.
After you leave the SNF, if you re-enter the same or another SNF within 30 days, you don't need another 3-day qualifying hospital stay to get additional SNF benefits. This is also true if you stop getting skilled care while in the SNF and then start getting skilled care again within 30 days.
If you refuse your daily skilled care or therapy, you may lose your Medicare SNF coverage. If you have a condition that keeps you from getting skilled care (like if you get the flu), you may be able to continue to get Medicare coverage temporarily.
If you stop getting skilled care in the SNF, or leave the SNF altogether, your SNF coverage may be affected depending on how long your break in SNF care lasts. If you disagree with your discharge for any reason, you can appeal.
If your break in skilled care lasts more than 30 days, you need a new 3-day hospital stay to qualify for additional SNF care. The new hospital stay doesn’t need to be for the same condition that you were treated for during your previous stay.
If your break in skilled care lasts for at least 60 days in a row, this ends your current benefit period and renews your SNF benefits. This means that the maximum coverage available would be up to 100 days of SNF benefits.