Palliative Care Services
Provider Type
- Physicians
- Hospitals
- Participating Physician Groups (PPG)
- Ancillary
Eligible members (including Dual Special Needs Plans (D-SNPs)) at any age may receive covered benefits and services while receiving palliative care. The member must be diagnosed with advanced cancer, congestive heart failure (CHF), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), or liver disease. Life expectancy is 12 months or less, health status continues to worsen and the emergency department (ED) or hospital is used to manage the illness.
Members receiving palliative care may move to hospice care if they meet the hospice eligibility criteria. For members ages 21 and older, palliative care benefits and curative care are not available once the patient moves to hospice. For members under age 21, curative care is available with hospice care.
Referrals
Palliative care services provide extra support to current benefits.
Providers can refer an eligible member to palliative care. Send a Care Management Referral Form (PDF) and related medical records by email or fax to the Care Management Department. To process the request correctly, the following information must be included on the request:
- Diagnosis code – Z51.5
- Procedure code – S0311
- Units – 6 (equals 6 months)
- Select the contracted provider of choice from the Health Net Contracted Palliative Care Providers list (PDF).
Eligibility Criteria
Members of any age are eligible to receive palliative care services if they meet all of the criteria outlined in section A. below, and at least one of the four requirements outlined in section B.
Members under age 21 who do not qualify for services based on the above criteria may become eligible for palliative care services according to the broader criteria outlined in section C. below, consistent with the provision of Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnostic and Treatment (EPSDT) services.
A. General Eligibility Criteria:
- The member is likely to, or has started to, use the hospital or emergency department as a means to manage the member's advanced disease; this refers to unanticipated decompensation and does not include elective procedures.
- The member has an advanced illness, as defined in section B below, with appropriate documentation of continued decline in health status, and is not eligible for or declines hospice enrollment.
- The member's death within a year would not be unexpected based on clinical status.
- The member has either received appropriate patient-desired medical therapy or is an individual for whom patient-desired medical therapy is no longer effective. The member is not in reversible acute decompensation.
- The member and, if applicable, the family/member-designated support person, agrees to:
- a. Attempt, as medically/clinically appropriate, in-home, residential-based, or outpatient disease management/palliative care instead of first going to the emergency department; and
- b.Participate in advance care planning discussions.
B. Disease-Specific Eligibility Criteria:
- Congestive heart failure (CHF): Must meet (a) and (b)
- a. The member is hospitalized due to CHF as the primary diagnosis with no further invasive interventions planned or meets criteria for the New York Heart Association's (NYHA) heart failure classification III or higher; and
- b. The member has an ejection fraction of less than 30 percent for systolic failure or significant co-morbidities.
- Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD): Must meet (a) or (b)
- a. The member has a forced expiratory volume (FEV) of one less than 35 percent of predicted and a 24-hour oxygen requirement of less than three liters per minute; or
- b. The member has a 24-hour oxygen requirement of greater than or equal to three liters per minute.
- Advanced cancer: Must meet (a) and (b)
- a. The member has a stage III or IV solid organ cancer, lymphoma, or leukemia; and
- b. The member has a Karnofsky Performance Scale score less than or equal to 70 or has failure of two lines of standard of care therapy (chemotherapy or radiation therapy).
- Liver disease: Must meet (a) and (b) combined or (c) alone
- a.The member has evidence of irreversible liver damage, serum albumin less than 3.0, and international normalized ratio greater than 1.3, and
- b. The member has ascites, subacute bacterial peritonitis, hepatic encephalopathy, hepatorenal syndrome, or recurrent esophageal varices; or
- c. The member has evidence of irreversible liver damage and has a Model for End Stage Liver Disease (MELD) score greater than 19.
C. Pediatric Palliative Care Eligibility Criteria:
Must meet 1. and 2. listed below. Members under age 21 may be eligible for palliative care and hospice services concurrently with curative care.
- The family and/or legal guardian agree to the provision of pediatric palliative care services; and
- There is documentation of a life-threatening diagnosis. This can include, but is not limited to:
- a. Conditions for which curative treatment is possible, but may fail (e.g., advanced or progressive cancer or complex and severe congenital or acquired heart disease); or
- b. Conditions requiring intensive long-term treatment aimed at maintaining quality of life (e.g., human immunodeficiency virus infection, cystic fibrosis, or muscular dystrophy); or
- c. Progressive conditions for which treatment is exclusively palliative after diagnosis (e.g., progressive metabolic disorders or severe forms of osteogenesis imperfecta); or
- d. Conditions involving severe, non-progressive disability, or causing extreme vulnerability to health complications (e.g., extreme prematurity, severe neurologic sequelae of infectious disease or trauma, severe cerebral palsy with recurrent infection or difficult-to-control symptoms).
If the member continues to meet the above minimum eligibility criteria or pediatric palliative care eligibility criteria, the member may continue to access both palliative care and curative care until the condition improves, stabilizes, or results in death.