How to Achieve a High PDPM Functional Score: A PDPM Cheat Sheet - Experience Care (2023)

The revised Patient Driven Payment Model (PDPM), which took effect in late 2019, brought with it a new way of calculating reimbursements. Now, long term care facilities need to focus on a case-mix model of clinically relevant factors to calculate reimbursement scores, rather than just volume-based services.

In this guide, we will give you a PDPM cheat sheet by:

  • Walking you through the optimal process of coding each step of your PDPM score
  • Helping you understand coding pitfalls
  • Showing how to add those scores to get your overall score and corresponding reimbursement amount using our free PDPM Admission Tool
  • Drawing your attention to that which helps you achieve a high score and maximize reimbursement under the new Patient-Driven Payment Model

How the PDPM Functional Score Works

PDPM is a per diem payment that is based on clinical characteristics, the patient assessment and diagnosis, and the resources needed to care for the resident. The daily reimbursement rate will depend on how sick the resident is and how many resources are required in order to provide high-quality care. Under PDPM, skilled nursing facilities are reimbursed for both the time their residents spend there and the complexity of care they receive. It was developed to encourage providers to focus on providing high-quality care that improves outcomes.

This new method is a shift from the Prospective Payment System (PPS), which used Resource Utilization Groups (RUG) rates to determine costs and was based on the volume of service, like the number of therapy minutes received, rather than what the resident’s day looks like. This new system of coding, by contrast, considers how much care the nursing staff provides and how much time and resources are allocated to each resident. You can find more details on the differences between RUG and PDPM.

Calculating your PDPM score isn’t a simple and straightforward formula, so we have pulled together a number of resources to help you through the process.

Before this new structure, there was a 3-level score that was a straight hierarchy. Now we have a number of different sections each of which correlates to a letter. Each letter then correlates to a dollar amount. All sections are then added together to get the overall functional score and reimbursement amount.

There are five components calculated from MDS coding that impact PDPM reimbursement:

(Video) How to Achieve a High PDPM Functional Score: A PDPM Cheat Sheet

  1. Physical therapy (PT) Score
  2. Occupational therapy (OT) Score
  3. Speech-language pathology (SLP) Score
  4. Nursing Score
  5. Non-therapy ancillary (NTA) Score

Calculating the PT & OT Functional Score in PDPM

The first category that you will need to calculate are the PT and OT function scores. These are scored on a 0-16 scale. The more independent the resident is the higher their score. So in this particular category, the lower the score, the more care and assistance the resident requires.

There are several activities of daily living (ADL) factors to calculate here in order to get a final score for Step 1 in this section and best use our PDPM cheat sheet.

  • Eating, oral hygiene, and toiletry hygiene are all straightforward scores that you will add together.
  • Sit to lying and lying to sitting should be scored and averaged.
  • Sit to stand as well as chair, bed and toilet transfers should be added and averaged.
  • Walking 50′ and walking 150′ should be averaged.

This calculation will give you a total PT/OT ADL score for Step 1 in this section.

How to Achieve a High PDPM Functional Score: A PDPM Cheat Sheet - Experience Care (1)

The next step in the PT/OT section is to decide what the primary diagnosis will be for the resident. Previously, this would have been decided based on whatever diagnosis the doctor gave at the hospital. However, there were some potential problems with this. One was that the primary issue for which the patient was being treated at the hospital was not always the primary issue for which they were receiving care at the long term care facility.

For example, a patient with Parkinson’s Disease may have entered a hospital to be treated for a UTI. Once the UTI was treated, they may have been released to a nursing home for rehabilitation and to build their strength back up after being hospitalized for a number of days. In the hospital, the primary diagnosis was a UTI. At the nursing home, though, the primary diagnosis is to treat the secondary effects of being sick with Parkinson’s. For the purpose of scoring the PDPM, you would use acute neurological as the primary category rather than medical management. In an instance like this, the resident director should have a conversation with the doctor to agree on the primary diagnosis for the purpose of the resident’s stay at the nursing facility.

Once you have determined the main category, you will need to look at the total PDPM ADL score that you calculated in Step 1 and the corresponding letter for this section. It is important to get the primary diagnosis right in order to get the maximum allowable reimbursement. For instance, an ADL score of 10 in the Acute Neurological section qualifies for more reimbursement than an ADL score of 10 in the Medical Management section.

How to Achieve a High PDPM Functional Score: A PDPM Cheat Sheet - Experience Care (2)

Calculating the SLP Functional Score

The next section you will need to calculate for residents with speech-related comorbidities is the SLP score. The first thing to document in this section is whether or not the patient falls under the category of acute neurological, which was determined in the previous section when determining the primary diagnosis. If the resident does fall under the section of acute neurological, you would get the one point for that.

How to Achieve a High PDPM Functional Score: A PDPM Cheat Sheet - Experience Care (3)

Next, you add one point for each comorbidity listed in the chart. An additional point should be added if the resident has cognitive impairment, which would be determined by a Brief Interview for Mental Status (BIMS). Now, you’ll add up the number of points received for this step and get either a 0, 1, 2, or 3.

How to Achieve a High PDPM Functional Score: A PDPM Cheat Sheet - Experience Care (4)

The last step in the SLP section is to consider whether the resident has a mechanically altered diet, swallow disorder, or both. Depending on your number score and whether there is one, both, or neither of these will determine the letter assignment and correlating dollar amount.

(Video) PointRight Education: PDPM: Understanding the Section GG ADL Function Scores

How to Achieve a High PDPM Functional Score: A PDPM Cheat Sheet - Experience Care (5)

Communicating with the Speech-Language Pathologist

When it comes to speech-language factors, doctors tend to defer to the speech therapist, so you may need to coordinate a discussion between the doctor and the speech therapist in order to get the most accurate information. Although speech therapists cannot give diagnoses, they can guide the doctor toward a more accurate diagnosis.

One of the ways that you can maximize your reimbursement and ensure you are receiving the proper scores is to pay extra attention to what the nurse mentions when discussing the resident’s care. For example, if the nurse mentions that they have to change the resident’s clothing two to three times per day, you should dig deeper into this discussion and find out what the root cause may be. If it is because the resident is dribbling food when they eat, you can infer that there may be a swallow disorder, which should prompt a discussion with the speech therapist and the doctor.

The Director of Nursing (DON) may have to facilitate discussions between a number of people on the care team. It is the responsibility of nursing home leadership to look for indicators that these discussions may be needed in order to achieve the correct functional score.

Calculating the Nursing Functional Score

Calculating the nursing ADL score is more straightforward than the first two steps. This is because nurses do not deal as much with PT/OT or speech issues as they do with daily care activities like moving the resident in order to avoid bedsores. The numbers for this section can be pulled straight from the previous steps.

How to Achieve a High PDPM Functional Score: A PDPM Cheat Sheet - Experience Care (6)

Ensure Proper Training for Nursing Staff

When it comes to calculating the nursing ADL scores, you can maximize reimbursements with proper training at the nurse or aide level to make sure they understand the differences between categories. Light touch and moderate assistance can be subjective, so you want to make sure everyone is on the same page with what falls under each category.

Take, for example, the different levels of assistance given to a resident during meals. If the nurse or aide has to touch the resident’s hand slightly to remind them to put the spoon in their mouth, that would be light touch (supervision), but if they have to help the resident put the spoon to their mouth, that would be considered partial to moderate assistance. It is important that everyone can accurately determine the level of assistance needed in cases like these.

A good way to make sure the information is being coded accurately is to ask detailed questions. Rather than asking “How much help does this resident need?” ask the question, “How does this resident get the food from the plate to their mouth?”

CNAs who were using RUG-IV group codes will need a certain amount of retraining. You still have to code things the new way for Medicaid, so right now, you may need to ask a CNA or nurse aid to code the same thing two different ways.

Determining the Nursing RUG Group

The next step in this section is to determine a nursing RUG group, which is similar to how things were done previously with Medicaid. For this step, you will need to go down a hierarchy. The higher up the resident lands, the more care the resident requires and the more reimbursement money will be provided.

(Video) PointRight Education: PDPM: ICD-10 Codes and the Drivers of PDPM

In this step, you will want to pay special attention to certain things to ensure you are maximizing your reimbursement:

  • Are the nurses providing respiratory therapy at least seven times per week? That will automatically put you into one of those higher categories. Respiratory therapy must be documented for at least 15 minutes per day, seven days per week. It can include minutes of nebs, inspirometer, lung assessment, and any minutes spent with a respiratory therapist in actual treatment.
  • Does the resident have chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)? If so, do they have shortness of breath when lying flat, meaning they have to be propped up on pillows? If this is the case, those residents are more prone to getting pneumonia, which means they will require more care, and, in turn, more time. That automatically puts them into one of the high categories.
  • Note that septicemia is different from sepsis. Septicemia places the patient into the Special Care High. Review a sepsis diagnosis carefully by looking at labs and having a discussion with the doctor about a diagnosis clarification if clinically appropriate.
How to Achieve a High PDPM Functional Score: A PDPM Cheat Sheet - Experience Care (7)

As you move through the chart, you will cross-reference the inclusion criteria with whether or not the resident has depression and what their ADL score is, to end up with the HIPPS letter and corresponding reimbursement amount for this section.

Calculating the NTA Functional Score

The last component of determining the resident’s functional score is to include the NTA score. This section includes a number of things for which long term care facilities previously did not get paid but were time-consuming. Now, these factors are taken into consideration when determining reimbursement amounts.

If any of the conditions listed on this section apply to the resident, they would get the correlating points for that condition. This section is also fairly straightforward: add up the points to determine the final score, which tells you where you fall. However, this section may require you to have more discussions with the doctor.

How to Achieve a High PDPM Functional Score: A PDPM Cheat Sheet - Experience Care (8)

Again, there are some things to which you will want to pay special attention in order to ensure you are maximizing your reimbursement.

For Example:

  • If you have a long-time alcoholic who is in recovery, but they have long-term liver damage and take medication for that, you may need to ask the doctor if the resident meets the criteria for diagnosis of cirrhosis of the liver, which you would award an additional point.
  • If a resident does score for cirrhosis of the liver, that can sometimes be related to malnutrition. It would be worth having a conversation with the dietician to see if that is a factor. That will get you to the next level and significantly increase your payment.
  • Doctors may sometimes be hesitant to diagnose inflammatory bowel disease, for insurance reasons. You might need to look at the data and context clues. Are there foods the resident needs to avoid? Are there foods they are allergic to? If so, that may be an indicator that they have inflammatory bowel disease, which would prompt a discussion with the doctor to add that diagnosis.

The most important thing here is to look for the low-hanging fruit or opportunities that you may initially glance over. In this section, just going from two points to three points is almost a 25% increase in payment. Paying close attention to potential diagnoses here can make a big difference in the reimbursement amount.

How to Achieve Accuracy: A PDPM Cheat Sheet

To achieve an accurate prediction of what your score will be and how much reimbursement you will receive, you will need to follow the steps in this PDPM cheat sheet. You should add up the scores for each section. There are many factors that help determine the PDPM functional score, and there is plenty of room for human error, so make sure to double-check to see that the scores are what you expected, as this will help with accuracy.

How to Achieve a High PDPM Functional Score: A PDPM Cheat Sheet - Experience Care (9)

There are a lot of things to consider here, and you will find that this new scoring system means that you spend a lot more time with your doctors, dieticians, speech therapists, and others on the care team. Taking the time to have those extra conversations will not only result in optimal reimbursements for the facility but also, most importantly, the best possible resident care.

(Video) Admission Marketing PDPM cheat sheet

How to Achieve a High PDPM Functional Score: A PDPM Cheat Sheet - Experience Care (10)

Getting Started With Implementation

A good place to start on Day 1 is by reviewing paperwork. Then, once the nurse has the opportunity to go in and evaluate the resident, they can have a conversation with the rehab director. By day 3, you should have had the opportunity to talk to the doctors and nurses and gather more information. Then you can talk with the care plan team and the family. So by the end of Day 3, the goal is to have projected a reimbursement rate and have a strong plan for what the resident needs in order to go home.

For those who are new to this process or are used to doing things according to previous standards, this may seem like a lot to take in, and the process may seem overwhelming at first. Experience Care has an entire featured section on PDPM Functional Score resources to help guide you and your team through this process. You can also read this article for more information specifically on calculating PDPM Functional Score.

  • Author
  • Recent Posts

Amber Kraus

(Video) PDPM Planning - Don'ts Dos and How Tos

Latest posts by Amber Kraus (see all)

  • 5 Tips for Nursing Documentation in Long Term Care - January 14, 2022
  • How to Achieve a High PDPM Functional Score: A PDPM Cheat Sheet - August 19, 2021
  • Kardex Nursing in Long Term Care Facilities - August 4, 2021

FAQs

What is the function score in PDPM? ›

The PDPM Function Score for PT Payment ranges from 0 through 24. Using the responses from Steps 1 and 2 above, determine the resident's PT group using the table below. 1 Calculate the sum of the Function Scores for Sit to Lying and Lying to Sitting on Side of Bed.

What are the 6 components of PDPM? ›

In the PDPM, there are five case-mix adjusted components: PT, OT, SLP, NTA, and Nursing. Each patient is to be classified into one and only one group for each of the five case-mix adjusted components.

What does PDPM mean for nurses? ›

What is PDPM? Patient-Driven Payment Model. The Patient-Driven Payment Model (PDPM) is the proposed new Medicare payment rule for skilled nursing facilities. It is intended to replace the current RUG-IV system with a completely new way of calculating reimbursement.

How do I choose a PDPM primary diagnosis? ›

The primary diagnosis must meet the criteria of the RAI Manual as well as the Coding Guidelines. The diagnosis requires a physician-documented diagnosis (or by a nurse practitioner, physician assistant, or clinical nurse specialist if allowable under state licensure laws) in the last 60 days.

What is a function score? ›

The function_score allows you to modify the score of documents that are retrieved by a query. This can be useful if, for example, a score function is computationally expensive and it is sufficient to compute the score on a filtered set of documents.

What is GG functional score? ›

Each item is scored on a 1-6 scale, with 6 being the most independent and 1 being the most dependent. So, the higher the overall score, the more functional and mobile the patient is. Scores are primarily based on the level of assistance required. Activities may be completed with or without assistive devices.

Do you need 5 days of therapy with PDPM? ›

If therapy is going to “count” as a skilled reason for Medicare Part A coverage, it must be delivered 5 days per week. Nursing documentation should demonstrate one or more of the following to support reasonable and necessary skilled care: Management and Evaluation of the Care Plan.

How many PDPM codes are there? ›

PDPM has 16 PT/OT case mix groups, 12 SLP case mix groups, 25 Nursing case mix groups and 6 NTA case mix groups, which multiplies to 28800 combinations.

What is the default PDPM code? ›

Default Billing

There may be instances in which providers may bill the "default" rate on the SNF claim (when an MDS assessment is late). The default code under PDPM is ZZZZZ, instead of the default.

What is PDPM mapping? ›

The Patient-Driven Payment Model (PDPM) is the reimbursement methodology for Medicare Part A for Skilled Nursing Facilities (SNFs) since October 1, 2019.

What is an interrupted stay for PDPM? ›

A stay is considered interrupted when

A resident leaves the facility and returns to that same SNF no later than the third calendar day after they left. The resident remains in the facility but is no longer under Medicare A coverage, and their Medicare A coverage needs to resume within three days.

What does RUG mean in MDS? ›

The Resource Utilization Group Score (RUG Score) appears near the very end of the MDS 3.0 in Section Z. The RUG score shows the type and quantity of care required for each individual resident.

How do you choose which diagnosis to code? ›

Here are three steps to ensure you select the proper ICD-10 codes:
  1. Step 1: Find the condition in the alphabetic index. Begin the process by looking for the main term in the alphabetic index. ...
  2. Step 2: Verify the code and identify the highest specificity. ...
  3. Step 3: Review the chapter-specific coding guidelines.
Mar 5, 2014

How do you calculate PDPM? ›

The ABILITY CAREWATCH PDPM calculator uses the payment for each component and is calculated by multiplying the case-mix index (CMI) that corresponds to the patient's case-mix group (CMG) by the wage adjusted component base payment rate, then by the specific day in the variable per diem adjustment schedule when ...

How do you determine the principal diagnosis? ›

In the inpatient setting, the primary diagnosis describes the diagnosis that was the most serious and/or resource-intensive during the hospitalization or the inpatient encounter. Typically, the primary diagnosis and the principal diagnosis are the same diagnosis, but this is not necessarily always so.

What does NTA mean in PDPM? ›

Under PDPM, CMS has broken the singular nursing component of RUG-IV into two separate components – Nursing and Non-Therapy Ancillary (NTA) – to adeptly account for the wide-ranging variations within the skilled population.

How many NTA points are there? ›

The individual NTA conditions have points ranging from 1 to 8. The provider will report on the Minimum Data Set (MDS) each of the comorbidities that a person has. The patient's NTA comorbidity score is the sum of the points associated with each relevant comorbidity.

How is presumption of coverage met? ›

Medicare Presumption of Coverage: Under SNF PPS, beneficiaries who are admitted or readmitted directly to an SNF after a qualifying hospital stay are considered to meet the level of care requirements up to and including the assessment reference date for the 5-day assessment, when assigned to one of the Resource ...

When should GG tab be completed? ›

When do I complete goals for Section GG? Complete goals for Section GG on the 5-day admission/reentry assessment. These goals reflect the expected level of performance of the resident when they leave the facility or the end of their Medicare Stay.

What is the difference between Section G and Section GG? ›

Section G: The guidance is to code the most amount of assistance provided within a 7 day look-back. In Section GG: Guidelines are to code the baseline performance ability within the first three days following admission and before treatment begins.

What is GG coding? ›

First, GG codes are a portion of the CMS, Resident Assessment Instrument, or RAI. According to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Long-Term Care Facility Resident Assessment Instrument 3.0 User's Manual: Version 1.16.

Which MDS assessments are required under PDPM? ›

PDPM Assessment Schedule

There will be three SNF Prospective Payment System (PPS) assessments under PDPM: the 5-day Assessment, the Interim Payment Assessment (IPA) and the PPS Discharge Assessment. The 5-day assessment and the PPS Discharge Assessment are required. The IPA is optional.

Can you combine 5-day and discharge assessment? ›

It is common practice to combine the OBRA Admission Assessment with the PPS 5-Day or 14-Day Assessment when the time frames coincide for both required assessments. This is allowable to avoid unnecessary duplication of effort.

How can I improve my CMI? ›

Five Ways to Improve Case-Mix Index For Your Community
  1. Hold CMI Review Meetings. ...
  2. Communicate with Therapy. ...
  3. Capture the Complete Clinical Picture. ...
  4. Accurately Code Activities of Daily Living. ...
  5. Complete Interviews Timely and Accurately.
Dec 16, 2021

What is a Hipp code? ›

Definition and Uses of Health Insurance Prospective Payment System Codes (HIPPS Codes) Health Insurance Prospective Payment System (HIPPS) rate codes represent specific sets of patient characteristics (or case-mix groups) health insurers use to make payment determinations under several prospective payment systems.

How many quality measures have a covariate adjustment? ›

That had to do with the covariate. There are three resident quality measures that have resident level covariates, which a covariate is found to increase the risk of an outcome.

What does OSA mean in MDS? ›

MINIMUM DATA SET (MDS) - Version 3.0. RESIDENT ASSESSMENT AND CARE SCREENING. Optional State Assessment (OSA) Item Set.

Which reimbursement methodology is used in the SNF services payment system? ›

Skilled nursing facilities (SNFs) that provide services to Medicare beneficiaries are paid under a prospective payment system (PPS) through Part A of the Medicare benefit.

How many hipps codes are there? ›

This significantly reduces the HIPPS code universe. In fact, it reduces the universe by 39%. That means there are only 17,568 combinations.

What PDPM component of care is not adjusted by characteristics of the resident? ›

Determining Payment Under PDPM

The non-case-mix component is not shown, as it is not dependent on resident characteristics.

What is a claims based quality measure? ›

Claims-based quality assessment, which is the use of billing or claims data to calculate performance on predetermined metrics of quality, has many advantages. It is fast; it allows the assessment of quality performance for millions of providers, using data from millions of patients relatively quickly.

How many NTA items are derived solely from the MDS? ›

The 49 of the 50 conditions and services that come from the MDS occur in sections H, K, M, O and I.

What services and conditions contribute to the SLP related comorbidity under PDPM? ›

To qualify for an SLP-related comorbidity, the resident must have one of the selected comorbidities coded on the MDS. Two of these conditions, tracheostomy care and ventilator or respirator care, are triggered from section O of the MDS, but only if received while a resident in the facility.

What is the function of the nursing facility quality measures? ›

The QMs offer information about how well nursing homes are caring for their residents' physical and clinical needs. The PPS 5-Day assessment is the first Medicare-required assessment to be completed when a resident is first admitted or re-admitted to a facility for a Medicare Part A SNF Stay.

What is the NTA case mix component? ›

The NTA component uses a weighted comorbidity score (i.e., high-cost conditions or extensive services count for more points) to assign a SNF resident to an NTA case-mix group. A resident's NTA score is the sum of the points associated with each comorbidity that they have.

How many quality measures have a covariate adjustment? ›

That had to do with the covariate. There are three resident quality measures that have resident level covariates, which a covariate is found to increase the risk of an outcome.

How many PDPM codes are there? ›

PDPM has 16 PT/OT case mix groups, 12 SLP case mix groups, 25 Nursing case mix groups and 6 NTA case mix groups, which multiplies to 28800 combinations.

What is the default PDPM code? ›

Default Billing

There may be instances in which providers may bill the "default" rate on the SNF claim (when an MDS assessment is late). The default code under PDPM is ZZZZZ, instead of the default.

Do you need 5 days of therapy with PDPM? ›

If therapy is going to “count” as a skilled reason for Medicare Part A coverage, it must be delivered 5 days per week. Nursing documentation should demonstrate one or more of the following to support reasonable and necessary skilled care: Management and Evaluation of the Care Plan.

Which MDS assessments are required under PDPM? ›

PDPM Assessment Schedule

There will be three SNF Prospective Payment System (PPS) assessments under PDPM: the 5-day Assessment, the Interim Payment Assessment (IPA) and the PPS Discharge Assessment. The 5-day assessment and the PPS Discharge Assessment are required. The IPA is optional.

What PDPM component of care is not adjusted by characteristics of the resident? ›

Determining Payment Under PDPM

The non-case-mix component is not shown, as it is not dependent on resident characteristics.

Which reimbursement methodology is used in the SNF services payment system? ›

Skilled nursing facilities (SNFs) that provide services to Medicare beneficiaries are paid under a prospective payment system (PPS) through Part A of the Medicare benefit.

Videos

1. Ask the Advisors: The Final Rule & PDPM
(FORVIS)
2. Charles Oliver and Melissa Brown - PDPM Reimbursement LIVE Webinar by Experience Care!
(Experience Care)
3. Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF) Patient Driven Payment Model (PDPM): Minimum Data Set (MDS) Changes
(Noridian Medicare Part A & B)
4. Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF) Patient Driven Payment Model (PDPM): Interrupted Stay
(Noridian Medicare Part A & B)
5. Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF) Patient Driven Payment Model (PDPM): Variable Per Diem
(Noridian Medicare Part A & B)
6. Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF) Patient Driven Payment Model (PDPM): Clinical Categories
(Noridian Medicare Part A & B)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Tuan Roob DDS

Last Updated: 02/17/2023

Views: 6160

Rating: 4.1 / 5 (42 voted)

Reviews: 89% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Tuan Roob DDS

Birthday: 1999-11-20

Address: Suite 592 642 Pfannerstill Island, South Keila, LA 74970-3076

Phone: +9617721773649

Job: Marketing Producer

Hobby: Skydiving, Flag Football, Knitting, Running, Lego building, Hunting, Juggling

Introduction: My name is Tuan Roob DDS, I am a friendly, good, energetic, faithful, fantastic, gentle, enchanting person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.