Follow
Share

My dad's medical bed broke and won't rise, and he is in his 90's. My mom recently passed and I am upset how things went with her care because I realized too late that her swallowing issue was not dementia but probably GERD related because she could swallow fine depending on what time she was eating. Strange right? And hospice was only stuck on "it's the progression of the disease" But that is another story... back to the bed... The heartache of her last week and then her passing felt worse when a few days later, my dad's own bed stopped lowering at the head. It made my life more manageable to keep the wheelchair for him and the bed like the driver said. He said it is ours. The insurance which is a Medicare advantage has no record of monthly charges on their records when I contacted them by phone. What does that mean? I have not checked the old monthly statements yet. If Medicare keeps buying new ones because they have suppliers that rely on Medicare to stay in business, then Medicare would simply order new beds for each hospice patient. If they clean them and reuse for a next patient, Medicare would not show an expense for it right? It would make my life easy if I can keep it for my dad.

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
I am under the impression that any of the equipment provided is the property of the supplier that gives it to you. With my Dad that supplier was at his house the next day picking up that equipment. Medicare rents the equipment they don't buy it.
Helpful Answer (7)
Report

Generally Hospice rents the beds that are provided to the patients. This way if another type of bed needs to be ordered, or another type of mattress they can call the supplier and have one delivered. If anything breaks another one can be delivered.
I would ask the Hospice Nurse, they are usually the ones that order DME supplies.
If it does belong to you, great. If not ask your dad's doctor to order a hospital bed for him.
Helpful Answer (5)
Report

We couldn't know the answer to this. You will have to check with hospice entities.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

Keep checking like you are doing now because the difference with your post is that a different company is being used by the hospice according to your post.

When my mother passed, they came out a few days later and got every bit of equipment down to the food table. The bed, the oxygen tank, the food table, the albuterol machine, etc.
 
It’s not just a hospice thing but with many medical professionals - once you or a loved one gets a dementia diagnosis, you can cancel any other medical possibilities. Seen it with mom before passing and now seeing it with dad.
 
Oh his weight loss is due to dementia – but dentures broke, oh his swallowing is due to dementia - no swallow study needed, oh his memory problem is due to dementia (and now one of his meds is removed) another improvement.
 
Many professionals are not willing to entertain other medical possibilities. God help us all!

Keep us posted if you could keep or had to replace!
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

Before my mom passed away in April, she needed a wheelchair and Medicare paid for it through our local medical supply store. When I went to pick it up they told me that is was considered a "rental" unless my mom kept it for 9 months or longer. After 9 months they considered it bought and paid for and belonging to my mom. I wonder if the medical beds are the same? I have no idea but I just thought I would share a similar type of story. I hope you can get your dad a new bed.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

You should check with the supplier.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

I had something similar happen. I called the company the rental came from. THEY would have started charging me if I hadn't called and they sent for the return.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report
JoAnn29 Jun 2021
When on Hospice its up to Hospice to call the supplier and tell them the client has passed. The supplier then picks it up. If they don't it's their problem or the Hospice for not calling them.
(1)
Report
Where did your dads medical bed come from? If it was supplied through Medicare from a DME supplier then you can call the supplier to replace or repair his bed. When we came home in 2019 Medicare supplied moms bed and a local DME equipment supplier delivered it - they have since had to repair and replace it when I have had any issues with the bed and even her air mattress - I call them and they are here within 24 hours - sometimes they can just repair it and most recently they did a total replacement. Hope this helps. 🤞🏼
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

I'm kind of confused, but I think you're saying you have dad's bed that is broken and mom's bed that works - two beds. Each of those beds probably has a label on it of which company delivered it.

I think it depends on how long the bed was 'rented' and paid for by Medicare. Seems like the time period of one year rental and then the bed belongs to patient. So if dad has his over a year, that's why there's no rental anymore. Call that company to do the repair. The bed sent by hospice will get picked up - it belongs to them/the durable goods provider they use. Hospice, your most recent provider, should be able to tell you when they will send someone for hospice bed. Again, look on the bed for owner name.

Many beds are just short term use in the home, so they are used over and over via Medicare/dr order. Some equipment is long term. Medicare pays for so long and if still needed after that period (1 year I think) it belongs to patient.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

After 2 years on hospice, my 95 year old Mom, deep into her Alzheimer's journey, graduated off hospice. Her regular doctor had to order all new equipment, hospital bed, special mattress, special wheel chair etc. She paid out of pocket for the new mattress and gel pad for the wheelchair so they belong to her. Medicare and her supplemental insurance cover much of the rental, she pays about $30 per month for the rental of the equipment. The company which provided the original equipment came to pick it up before the replacement things came, but left it until she had new things. It was so hard to lose hospice, they were allowed in the building when I was not. We have been praying for the Lord to take her for 4 years, she has no idea who, where etc. Does not know me, can barely see or hear, requires complete assistance with everything, it is heartbreaking.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

See All Answers
This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter